Quantifying the link between heavy precipitation and Northern Hemisphere blocking—A Lagrangian analysis

Abstract Atmospheric blocks strongly influence surface weather, including extremes such as heat waves and cold spells. Recently, diabatic heating and associated upper‐tropospheric potential vorticity (PV) modification have been identified as important modulators of atmospheric blocking dynamics. Als...

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Main Authors: Sina Lenggenhager, Olivia Martius
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Wiley 2020-10-01
Series:Atmospheric Science Letters
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1002/asl.999
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spelling doaj-42b418df44cf473592d2c4d6db97843c2020-11-25T03:51:28ZengWileyAtmospheric Science Letters1530-261X2020-10-012110n/an/a10.1002/asl.999Quantifying the link between heavy precipitation and Northern Hemisphere blocking—A Lagrangian analysisSina Lenggenhager0Olivia Martius1Oeschger Center for Climate Change Research and Institute of Geography University of Bern Bern SwitzerlandOeschger Center for Climate Change Research and Institute of Geography University of Bern Bern SwitzerlandAbstract Atmospheric blocks strongly influence surface weather, including extremes such as heat waves and cold spells. Recently, diabatic heating and associated upper‐tropospheric potential vorticity (PV) modification have been identified as important modulators of atmospheric blocking dynamics. Also, robust links between atmospheric blocks and proximate heavy precipitation events have been established. This leads to the question of the extent to which diabatic heating associated with heavy precipitation events influences Northern Hemisphere blocking. This study uses 5 years of 3‐day back trajectories started from objectively identified blocks in the ERA‐Interim dataset to investigate this relationship. A substantial fraction of air parcels in blocks pass through heavy precipitation areas. The exact fraction depends on the choice of heavy precipitation threshold. Roughly 19% of all the trajectories in a block pass a heavy precipitation area (>95th percentile) area while being saturated. Of the air parcels in a block that are heated at least 5 K, 60% pass a heavy precipitation area while saturated. This fraction varies with the season and geographical area. The overall fraction is lowest in summer and highest in winter, higher over oceans than over land, and higher over the Pacific than over the Atlantic. In summer, heating is relevant over the continents and heating over North America influences blocks over the eastern Atlantic. For summer blocks in the North Atlantic and over Scandinavia, heating happens partly over the European continent.https://doi.org/10.1002/asl.999atmospheric blocksdiabatic heatingheavy precipitationPV modification by latent heatingtrajectories
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Sina Lenggenhager
Olivia Martius
spellingShingle Sina Lenggenhager
Olivia Martius
Quantifying the link between heavy precipitation and Northern Hemisphere blocking—A Lagrangian analysis
Atmospheric Science Letters
atmospheric blocks
diabatic heating
heavy precipitation
PV modification by latent heating
trajectories
author_facet Sina Lenggenhager
Olivia Martius
author_sort Sina Lenggenhager
title Quantifying the link between heavy precipitation and Northern Hemisphere blocking—A Lagrangian analysis
title_short Quantifying the link between heavy precipitation and Northern Hemisphere blocking—A Lagrangian analysis
title_full Quantifying the link between heavy precipitation and Northern Hemisphere blocking—A Lagrangian analysis
title_fullStr Quantifying the link between heavy precipitation and Northern Hemisphere blocking—A Lagrangian analysis
title_full_unstemmed Quantifying the link between heavy precipitation and Northern Hemisphere blocking—A Lagrangian analysis
title_sort quantifying the link between heavy precipitation and northern hemisphere blocking—a lagrangian analysis
publisher Wiley
series Atmospheric Science Letters
issn 1530-261X
publishDate 2020-10-01
description Abstract Atmospheric blocks strongly influence surface weather, including extremes such as heat waves and cold spells. Recently, diabatic heating and associated upper‐tropospheric potential vorticity (PV) modification have been identified as important modulators of atmospheric blocking dynamics. Also, robust links between atmospheric blocks and proximate heavy precipitation events have been established. This leads to the question of the extent to which diabatic heating associated with heavy precipitation events influences Northern Hemisphere blocking. This study uses 5 years of 3‐day back trajectories started from objectively identified blocks in the ERA‐Interim dataset to investigate this relationship. A substantial fraction of air parcels in blocks pass through heavy precipitation areas. The exact fraction depends on the choice of heavy precipitation threshold. Roughly 19% of all the trajectories in a block pass a heavy precipitation area (>95th percentile) area while being saturated. Of the air parcels in a block that are heated at least 5 K, 60% pass a heavy precipitation area while saturated. This fraction varies with the season and geographical area. The overall fraction is lowest in summer and highest in winter, higher over oceans than over land, and higher over the Pacific than over the Atlantic. In summer, heating is relevant over the continents and heating over North America influences blocks over the eastern Atlantic. For summer blocks in the North Atlantic and over Scandinavia, heating happens partly over the European continent.
topic atmospheric blocks
diabatic heating
heavy precipitation
PV modification by latent heating
trajectories
url https://doi.org/10.1002/asl.999
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