Are sudden stratospheric warmings preceded by anomalous tropospheric wave activity?

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Abstract

A combination of 240 years of output from a state-of-the-art chemistry-climate model and a twentiethcentury reanalysis product is used to investigate to what extent sudden stratospheric warmings are preceded by anomalous tropospheric wave activity. To this end we study the fate of lower tropospheric wave events (LTWEs) and their interaction with the stratospheric mean flow. These LTWEs are contrasted with sudden stratospheric deceleration events (SSDs), which are similar to sudden stratospheric warmings but place more emphasis on the explosive dynamical nature of such events. Reanalysis and model output provide very similar statistics: Around one-third of the identified SSDs are preceded by wave events in the lower troposphere, while two-thirds of the SSDs are not preceded by a tropospheric wave event. In addition, only 20% of all anomalous tropospheric wave events are followed by an SSD in the stratosphere. This constitutes statistically robust evidence that the anomalous amplification of wave activity in the stratosphere that drives SSDs is not necessarily due to an anomalous amplification of the waves in the source region (i.e., the lower troposphere). The results suggest that the dynamics in the lowermost stratosphere and the vortex geometry are essential, and should be carefully analyzed in the search for precursors of SSDs.

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De La Cámara, A., Birner, T., & Albers, J. R. (2019). Are sudden stratospheric warmings preceded by anomalous tropospheric wave activity? Journal of Climate, 32(21), 7173–7189. https://doi.org/10.1175/JCLI-D-19-0269.1

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