Abstract

AbstractDuring the winter of 2015–2016, an extraordinary warming event occurred in the troposphere in the Arctic region. The above‐normal temperatures extended from the surface to 300 hPa in the Arctic. The number of extremely warm days derived from the surface air temperature revealed that this event was the most significant warming event since 1980. It was found that the tropospheric warming anomaly was not fully dependent on the warming anomalies at lower levels, and it formed earlier than the lower anomalies. In December 2015, there were three obvious warm centers in the troposphere in the mid‐high latitude regions in eastern North America, northern Europe, and western Asia. Albeit the strongest warming anomaly occurred in North America, the prominent warm advection to the Arctic region was transported from northern Europe during the initial stage of the Arctic mid‐upper tropospheric warming. Further investigation revealed that the teleconnection wave train stretching across North America to the North Atlantic and northern Europe contributed significantly to the existence of a poleward transport channel from northern Europe to the Arctic. The wave train spread from west to east and produced a strong southerly wind disturbance over the warm region in northern Europe. As a result, extraordinary poleward heat and water vapour transport occurred across the polar boundary causing substantial warming in the Arctic mid‐upper troposphere. During the extreme Arctic tropospheric warming event, the dynamic processes related to the heat transport over northern Europe directly contributed to the advanced rapid warming in the Arctic mid‐upper troposphere; whereas, the dynamic and thermal processes associated with the transport across the Arctic boundary jointly maintained the late stage of Arctic warming.

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