In recent decades, the interior regions of Eurasia and North America have experienced several unprecedentedly cold winters despite the global surface air temperature increases. One possible explanation of these increasing extreme cold winters comes from the so-called Warm Arctic Cold Continent (WACC) pattern, reflecting the effects of the amplified Arctic warming in driving the circulation change over surrounding continents. This study analyzed reanalysis data and model experiments forced by different levels of anthropogenic forcing. It is found that WACC exists on synoptic scales in observations, model’s historical and even future runs. In the future, the analysis suggests a continued presence of WACC but with a slightly weakened cold extreme due to the overall warming. Warm Arctic events under the warmer climate will be associated with not only a colder continent in East Asia but also a warmer continent, depending on the teleconnection process that is also complicated by the warmer Arctic. Such an increasingly association suggests a reduction in potential predictability of the midlatitude winter anomalies.
CITATION STYLE
Hong, Y., Wang, S. Y. S., Son, S. W., Jeong, J. H., Kim, S. W., Kim, B., … Yoon, J. H. (2023). Arctic-associated increased fluctuations of midlatitude winter temperature in the 1.5° and 2.0° warmer world. Npj Climate and Atmospheric Science, 6(1). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41612-023-00345-y
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