Asymmetric Relationship between the Meridional Displacement of the Asian Westerly Jet and the Silk Road Pattern

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Abstract

In previous work, a significant relationship was identified between the meridional displacement of the Asian westerly jet (JMD) and the Silk Road Pattern (SRP) in summer. The present study reveals that this relationship is robust in northward JMD years but absent in southward JMD years. In other words, the amplitude of the SRP increases with northward displacement of the jet but shows little change with southward displacement. Further analysis indicates that, in northward JMD years, the Rossby wave source (RWS) anomalies, which are primarily contributed by the planetary vortex stretching, are significantly stronger around the entrance of the Asian jet, i.e., the Mediterranean Sea–Caspian Sea area, with the spatial distribution being consistent with that related to the SRP. By contrast, in southward JMD years, the RWS anomalies are much weaker. Therefore, this study suggests that the RWS plays a crucial role in inducing the asymmetry of the JMD–SRP relationship. The results imply that climate anomalies may be stronger in strongly northward-displaced JMD years due to the concurrence of the JMD and SRP, and thus more attention should be paid to these years.

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Hong, X., Lu, R., & Li, S. (2018). Asymmetric Relationship between the Meridional Displacement of the Asian Westerly Jet and the Silk Road Pattern. Advances in Atmospheric Sciences, 35(4), 389–396. https://doi.org/10.1007/s00376-017-6320-2

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