Abstract

The impact of the Arctic Oscillation (AO) on the predictability of mid-high latitude circulation in December is analysed using a full set of hindcasts generated form the Beijing Climate Center Atmospheric General Circulation Model version 2.2 (BCC_AGCM2.2). The results showed that there is a relationship between the predictability of the model on the Eurasian mid-high latitude circulation and the phase of AO, with the highest predictability in the negative AO phase and the lowest predictability in the normal AO phase. Moreover, the difference of predictability exists at different lead times. The potential sources of the high predictability in the negative AO phase in the BCC_AGCM2.2 model were further diagnosed. It was found that the differences of predictability on the Eurasian mid-high latitude circulation also exist in different Arctic sea ice anomalies, and the model performs well in reproducing the response of Arctic sea ice on the AO. The predictability is higher when sudden stratospheric warming (SSW) events occur, and strong SSW events tend to form a negative AO phase distribution in the Eurasian mid-high latitudes both in the observation and model. In addition, the model captured the blocking over the mid-high latitudes well, it may be related to the relatively long duration of the blocking. Changes in the AO will affect the blocking circulations over the mid-high latitudes, which partly explains the high predictability of the model in negative AO phases from the aspect of the internal atmospheric dynamics.

Highlights

  • The Arctic Oscillation (AO) is the dominant mode of the interannual variability in the extratropical regions of the Northern Hemisphere in winter

  • The results showed that there is a relationship between the predictability of the model on the Eurasian mid-high latitude circulation and the phase of AO, with the highest predictability in the negative AO phase and the lowest predictability in the normal AO phase

  • We found that the differences of predictability on the Eurasian mid-high latitude circulation exist in different Arctic sea ice anomalies

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Summary

Introduction

The Arctic Oscillation (AO) is the dominant mode of the interannual variability in the extratropical regions of the Northern Hemisphere in winter. Its typical feature is the opposite change in pressure between the polar regions and the mid-high latitudes in the Northern Hemisphere [1, 2]. Changes in the East Asian winter monsoon (EAWM) and winter surface climate that have a great social impact on East Asia are closely related to the interannual and interdecadal changes in the AO. The atmospheric circulation anomaly corresponding to the negative AO phase tends to be a strong EAWM and cold surface air temperature (SAT) anomaly in East Asia in winter and often brings strong cold wave events [10, 11], and vice versa [12,13,14].

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