Tropical atmospheric drivers of wintertime European precipitation events

From observations, we identify a wave‐like pattern associated with northwestern European seasonal precipitation events. These events are associated with tropical precipitation anomalies, prompting us to investigate if there are any tropical–extratropical teleconnections, in particular the role of tr...

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Main Authors: Li, R, Woolings, T, O'Reilly, C, Scaife, A
Format: Journal article
Published: Wiley 2019
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author Li, R
Woolings, T
O'Reilly, C
Scaife, A
author_facet Li, R
Woolings, T
O'Reilly, C
Scaife, A
author_sort Li, R
collection OXFORD
description From observations, we identify a wave‐like pattern associated with northwestern European seasonal precipitation events. These events are associated with tropical precipitation anomalies, prompting us to investigate if there are any tropical–extratropical teleconnections, in particular the role of tropical anomalies in driving extratropical dynamics through Rossby wave propagation. Using a hierarchy of models from ray tracing to barotropic and baroclinic models, we investigate the Rossby wave mechanism and test potential tropical drivers and yield qualitative results. Using a barotropic model, we identify potential Rossby wave source regions which are consistent between the observations and the model. These regions include the tropical western and eastern Atlantic, the subtropical eastern Atlantic and, to a smaller degree, the subtropical eastern Pacific. Zonal wavenumber 2 and 3 components of the barotropic model responses match well with the observations and ray tracing supports the importance of these components. We use a baroclinic model to investigate the link between the observed Rossby wave source anomalies and the observed tropical precipitation anomalies. The reduced precipitation observed in the tropical Atlantic just north of the Equator can generate some of the observed Rossby wave source anomalies in the tropical Atlantic, while the increased precipitation observed in the tropical eastern Pacific can generate some of the observed Rossby wave source anomalies in the subtropical eastern Pacific. Our results can also be applied to European drought events because of the qualitative linearity in the observations and in our linear methods.
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spelling oxford-uuid:86b5a46e-d5ac-494c-8635-fbbef16a02a12022-03-26T22:05:53ZTropical atmospheric drivers of wintertime European precipitation eventsJournal articlehttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_dcae04bcuuid:86b5a46e-d5ac-494c-8635-fbbef16a02a1Symplectic ElementsWiley2019Li, RWoolings, TO'Reilly, CScaife, AFrom observations, we identify a wave‐like pattern associated with northwestern European seasonal precipitation events. These events are associated with tropical precipitation anomalies, prompting us to investigate if there are any tropical–extratropical teleconnections, in particular the role of tropical anomalies in driving extratropical dynamics through Rossby wave propagation. Using a hierarchy of models from ray tracing to barotropic and baroclinic models, we investigate the Rossby wave mechanism and test potential tropical drivers and yield qualitative results. Using a barotropic model, we identify potential Rossby wave source regions which are consistent between the observations and the model. These regions include the tropical western and eastern Atlantic, the subtropical eastern Atlantic and, to a smaller degree, the subtropical eastern Pacific. Zonal wavenumber 2 and 3 components of the barotropic model responses match well with the observations and ray tracing supports the importance of these components. We use a baroclinic model to investigate the link between the observed Rossby wave source anomalies and the observed tropical precipitation anomalies. The reduced precipitation observed in the tropical Atlantic just north of the Equator can generate some of the observed Rossby wave source anomalies in the tropical Atlantic, while the increased precipitation observed in the tropical eastern Pacific can generate some of the observed Rossby wave source anomalies in the subtropical eastern Pacific. Our results can also be applied to European drought events because of the qualitative linearity in the observations and in our linear methods.
spellingShingle Li, R
Woolings, T
O'Reilly, C
Scaife, A
Tropical atmospheric drivers of wintertime European precipitation events
title Tropical atmospheric drivers of wintertime European precipitation events
title_full Tropical atmospheric drivers of wintertime European precipitation events
title_fullStr Tropical atmospheric drivers of wintertime European precipitation events
title_full_unstemmed Tropical atmospheric drivers of wintertime European precipitation events
title_short Tropical atmospheric drivers of wintertime European precipitation events
title_sort tropical atmospheric drivers of wintertime european precipitation events
work_keys_str_mv AT lir tropicalatmosphericdriversofwintertimeeuropeanprecipitationevents
AT woolingst tropicalatmosphericdriversofwintertimeeuropeanprecipitationevents
AT oreillyc tropicalatmosphericdriversofwintertimeeuropeanprecipitationevents
AT scaifea tropicalatmosphericdriversofwintertimeeuropeanprecipitationevents