Abstract

AbstractSudden stratospheric warming (SSW) events are extreme atmospheric regimes which can have a signature in surface weather up to 40 days after event onset in the stratosphere. SSWs can be classified as either vortex splitting or vortex displacement events, with the nature and timing of the surface impact potentially being different between the two. In this study, using ERA40/Interim reanalysis data, we develop a simple empirical downward tracking algorithm which for the first time allows us to estimate the time of surface impact for individual SSW events. We show that the surface impact following splitting events is, on average, about 1 week earlier than following displacement events, albeit with considerable variability. By compositing tropospheric responses around the identified date of surface impact, rather than around the central stratospheric onset date as common in previous studies, we can better constrain the surface signal of SSWs. We find that while the difference in North Atlantic Oscillation anomalies between split and displacement vortices is small, surface temperature anomalies over northwest Europe and northern Eurasia are significantly colder for splitting events, particularly over the UK just prior to the surface impact date. Displacement events on average are wetter over Northwest Europe around the time of surface impact, consistent with the jet stream being displaced further south in response to split events. Our downtracking algorithm can be used with any reanalyzes and gridded model data, and therefore will be a valuable tool for use with the latest climate models.

Highlights

  • IntroductionA polar vortex develops in the stratosphere (the stratospheric polar vortex; SPV), with strong westerly zonal winds blowing around a region of low temperatures roughly located over the pole

  • In winter, a polar vortex develops in the stratosphere, with strong westerly zonal winds blowing around a region of low temperatures roughly located over the pole

  • Sudden stratospheric warming (SSW) events are extreme atmospheric regimes which can have a signature in surface weather up to 40 days after event onset in the stratosphere

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Summary

Introduction

A polar vortex develops in the stratosphere (the stratospheric polar vortex; SPV), with strong westerly zonal winds blowing around a region of low temperatures roughly located over the pole. The zonal mean westerly winds at 10 hPa and 60°N reverse, and this is typically used as the definition of an SSW (for more details see Butler et al, 2017). J. Matthewman & Esler, 2011) and to the vertical propagation of planetary waves from the troposphere, often associated with tropospheric blocking (Martius et al, 2009), which break and interact with the mean flow (Matsuno, 1971; Polvani & Waugh, 2004)

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