A dynamical systems approach to studying midlatitude weather extremes

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Abstract

Extreme weather occurrences carry enormous social and economic costs and routinely garner widespread scientific and media coverage. The ability to predict these events is therefore a topic of crucial importance. Here we propose a novel predictability pathway for extreme events, by building upon recent advances in dynamical systems theory. We show that simple dynamical systems metrics can be used to identify sets of large-scale atmospheric flow patterns with similar spatial structure and temporal evolution on time scales of several days to a week. In regions where these patterns favor extreme weather, they afford a particularly good predictability of the extremes. We specifically test this technique on the atmospheric circulation in the North Atlantic region, where it provides predictability of large-scale wintertime surface temperature extremes in Europe up to 1 week in advance.

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Messori, G., Caballero, R., & Faranda, D. (2017). A dynamical systems approach to studying midlatitude weather extremes. Geophysical Research Letters, 44(7), 3346–3354. https://doi.org/10.1002/2017GL072879

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