Abstract

The North Atlantic jet stream is projected to extend eastward towards Europe in boreal winter in response to climate change. We show that this response is robust across a hierarchy of climate models and climate change scenarios. We further show that cloud-radiative changes contribute robustly to the eastward extension of the jet stream in three atmosphere models, but lead to model uncertainties in the jet stream response over the North Atlantic. The magnitude of the cloud contribution depends on the model, consistent with differences in the magnitude of changes in upper-tropospheric cloud-radiative heating. We further study the role of regional cloud changes in one of the three atmosphere models, i.e. the ICON model. Tropical cloud-radiative changes dominate the cloud impact on the eastward extension of the jet stream in ICON. Cloud-radiative changes over the Indian Ocean, western tropical Pacific, and eastern tropical Pacific contribute to this response, while tropical Atlantic cloud changes have a minor impact. Our results highlight the importance of upper-tropospheric tropical clouds for the regional circulation response to climate change over the North Atlantic-European region and uncertainty therein.

Highlights

  • The North Atlantic jet stream is projected to extend eastward towards Europe in boreal winter in response to climate change

  • All three scenarios show a poleward shift and strengthening of the jet stream over the North Atlantic, and a zonal wind increase over central and northern Europe (Fig. 1a-c). The latter is associated with an eastward extension of the North Atlantic jet stream towards

  • Tropical clouds dominate the cloud-radiative impact on the jet exit strengthening in ICON

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Summary

Introduction

The North Atlantic jet stream is projected to extend eastward towards Europe in boreal winter in response to climate change. The atmospheric pathway of the cloud-radiative impact contributes substantially to the zonal wind and jet stream responses in atmosphere models in the zonal-mean perspective (Voigt et al, 2019) and across seasons and regions (Albern et al, 2019, 2020).

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