Abstract

Abstract This study revisits the question posed by Hoskins on why the Northern Hemisphere Pacific sea level pressure (SLP) anticyclone is strongest and maximally extended in summer when the Hadley cell descent in the northern subtropics is the weakest. The paradoxical evolution is revisited because anticyclone buildup to the majestic summer structure is gradual, spread evenly over the preceding 4–6 months, and not just confined to the monsoon-onset period, which is interesting, as monsoons are posited to be the cause of the summer vigor of the anticyclone. Anticyclone buildup is moreover found focused in the extratropics, not the subtropics, where SLP seasonality is shown to be much weaker, generating a related paradox within the context of the Hadley cell’s striking seasonality. Showing this seasonality to arise from, and thus represent, remarkable descent variations in the Asian monsoon sector, but not over the central-eastern ocean basins, leads to the resolution of this paradox. Evolution of other prominent anticyclones is analyzed to critique the development mechanisms: the Azores high evolves like the Pacific one, but without a monsoon to its immediate west. The Mascarene high evolves differently, peaking in austral winter. Monsoons are not implicated in both cases. Diagnostic modeling of seasonal circulation development in the Pacific sector concludes this inquiry. Of the three forcing regions examined, the Pacific midlatitudes are found to be the most influential, accounting for over two-thirds of the winter-to-summer SLP development in the extratropics (6–8 hPa), with the bulk coming from the abatement of winter storm-track heating and transients. The Asian monsoon contribution (2–3 hPa) is dominant in the Pacific (and Atlantic) subtropics. The modeling results resonate with observational findings and attest to the demise of winter storm tracks as the principal cause of the summer vigor of the Pacific anticyclone.

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