A possible influence of equatorial winds on the September 2002 Southern Hemisphere sudden warming event

The stratospheric sudden warming in the Southern Hemisphere (SH) in September 2002 was unexpected for two reasons. First, planetary wave activity in the Southern Hemisphere is very weak, and midwinter warmings have never been observed, at least not since observations of the upper stratosphere became...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Gray, L, Norton, W, Pascoe, C, Charlton, A
Format: Journal article
Language:English
Published: 2005
_version_ 1826276891312521216
author Gray, L
Norton, W
Pascoe, C
Charlton, A
author_facet Gray, L
Norton, W
Pascoe, C
Charlton, A
author_sort Gray, L
collection OXFORD
description The stratospheric sudden warming in the Southern Hemisphere (SH) in September 2002 was unexpected for two reasons. First, planetary wave activity in the Southern Hemisphere is very weak, and midwinter warmings have never been observed, at least not since observations of the upper stratosphere became regularly available. Second, the warming occurred in a west phase of the quasi-biennial oscillation (QBO) in the lower stratosphere. This is unexpected because warmings are usually considered to be more likely in the east phase of the QBO, when a zero wind line is present in the winter subtropics and hence confines planetary wave propagation to higher latitudes closer to the polar vortex. At first, this evidence suggests that the sudden warming must therefore be simply a result of anomalously strong planetary wave forcing from the troposphere. However, recent model studies have suggested that the midwinter polar vortex may also be sensitive to the equatorial winds in the upper stratosphere, the region dominated by the semiannual oscillation. In this paper, the time series of equatorial zonal winds from two different data sources, the 40-yr ECMWF Re-Analysis (ERA) and the Met Office assimilated dataset, are reviewed. Both suggest that the equatorial winds in the upper stratosphere above 10 hPa were anomalously easterly in 2002. Idealized model experiments are described in which the modeled equatorial winds were relaxed toward these observations for various years to examine whether the anomalous easterlies in 2002 could influence the timing of a warming event. It is found that the 2002 equatorial winds speed up the evolution of a warming event in the model. Therefore, this study suggests that the anomalous easterlies in the 1-10-hPa region may have been a contributory factor in the development of the observed SH warming. However, it is concluded that it is unlikely that the anomalous equatorial winds alone can explain the 2002 warming event. © 2005 American Meteorological Society.
first_indexed 2024-03-06T23:20:40Z
format Journal article
id oxford-uuid:689d2756-0119-45f3-b82e-dbe1cddb1d16
institution University of Oxford
language English
last_indexed 2024-03-06T23:20:40Z
publishDate 2005
record_format dspace
spelling oxford-uuid:689d2756-0119-45f3-b82e-dbe1cddb1d162022-03-26T18:46:00ZA possible influence of equatorial winds on the September 2002 Southern Hemisphere sudden warming eventJournal articlehttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_dcae04bcuuid:689d2756-0119-45f3-b82e-dbe1cddb1d16EnglishSymplectic Elements at Oxford2005Gray, LNorton, WPascoe, CCharlton, AThe stratospheric sudden warming in the Southern Hemisphere (SH) in September 2002 was unexpected for two reasons. First, planetary wave activity in the Southern Hemisphere is very weak, and midwinter warmings have never been observed, at least not since observations of the upper stratosphere became regularly available. Second, the warming occurred in a west phase of the quasi-biennial oscillation (QBO) in the lower stratosphere. This is unexpected because warmings are usually considered to be more likely in the east phase of the QBO, when a zero wind line is present in the winter subtropics and hence confines planetary wave propagation to higher latitudes closer to the polar vortex. At first, this evidence suggests that the sudden warming must therefore be simply a result of anomalously strong planetary wave forcing from the troposphere. However, recent model studies have suggested that the midwinter polar vortex may also be sensitive to the equatorial winds in the upper stratosphere, the region dominated by the semiannual oscillation. In this paper, the time series of equatorial zonal winds from two different data sources, the 40-yr ECMWF Re-Analysis (ERA) and the Met Office assimilated dataset, are reviewed. Both suggest that the equatorial winds in the upper stratosphere above 10 hPa were anomalously easterly in 2002. Idealized model experiments are described in which the modeled equatorial winds were relaxed toward these observations for various years to examine whether the anomalous easterlies in 2002 could influence the timing of a warming event. It is found that the 2002 equatorial winds speed up the evolution of a warming event in the model. Therefore, this study suggests that the anomalous easterlies in the 1-10-hPa region may have been a contributory factor in the development of the observed SH warming. However, it is concluded that it is unlikely that the anomalous equatorial winds alone can explain the 2002 warming event. © 2005 American Meteorological Society.
spellingShingle Gray, L
Norton, W
Pascoe, C
Charlton, A
A possible influence of equatorial winds on the September 2002 Southern Hemisphere sudden warming event
title A possible influence of equatorial winds on the September 2002 Southern Hemisphere sudden warming event
title_full A possible influence of equatorial winds on the September 2002 Southern Hemisphere sudden warming event
title_fullStr A possible influence of equatorial winds on the September 2002 Southern Hemisphere sudden warming event
title_full_unstemmed A possible influence of equatorial winds on the September 2002 Southern Hemisphere sudden warming event
title_short A possible influence of equatorial winds on the September 2002 Southern Hemisphere sudden warming event
title_sort possible influence of equatorial winds on the september 2002 southern hemisphere sudden warming event
work_keys_str_mv AT grayl apossibleinfluenceofequatorialwindsontheseptember2002southernhemispheresuddenwarmingevent
AT nortonw apossibleinfluenceofequatorialwindsontheseptember2002southernhemispheresuddenwarmingevent
AT pascoec apossibleinfluenceofequatorialwindsontheseptember2002southernhemispheresuddenwarmingevent
AT charltona apossibleinfluenceofequatorialwindsontheseptember2002southernhemispheresuddenwarmingevent
AT grayl possibleinfluenceofequatorialwindsontheseptember2002southernhemispheresuddenwarmingevent
AT nortonw possibleinfluenceofequatorialwindsontheseptember2002southernhemispheresuddenwarmingevent
AT pascoec possibleinfluenceofequatorialwindsontheseptember2002southernhemispheresuddenwarmingevent
AT charltona possibleinfluenceofequatorialwindsontheseptember2002southernhemispheresuddenwarmingevent