分季节预报中平流层对冬季北大西洋风暴轨迹的影响

Hilla Afargan‐Gerstman, D. Büeler, C. O. Wulff, M. Sprenger, Daniella I. V. Domeisen
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引用次数: 2

摘要

摘要极端平流层极地涡旋事件,如平流层突然变暖(SSWs)或极强极地涡旋事件,会对冬季的地面天气产生重大影响。平流层突变通常与负北大西洋涛动(NAO)条件、北极冷空气爆发和北大西洋中纬度风暴轨迹南移有关,而强极地涡旋事件往往与正北大西洋涛动阶段、外太平洋相对温暖条件和极地风暴轨迹南移有关。风暴轨道位置的这种变化以及北大西洋和欧洲上空相关的南极气旋频率,会增加人口稠密地区发生极端暴风雪、洪水或大雪的风险。因此,巧妙地预测平流层极地涡旋极端天气的下行影响,可以提高副季节尺度上的副热带冬季风暴的可预测性。然而,这些对流层风暴轨道的向下影响存在很强的事件间变异性。利用 ECMWF 再分析数据和来自副季节到季节(S2S)预测项目数据库的再预测数据,我们研究了平流层对副热带气旋的影响,并使用气旋探测算法进行了识别。在 SSW 发生后,再预报中北大西洋和欧洲上空的气旋频率会向赤道方向移动,而在强极地涡旋事件发生后则会出现相反的反应,这与再分析中的反应一致。然而,尽管在第 1-4 周,通常能很好地捕捉到具有典型表面影响的 SSW 之后的气旋频率响应,但只有不到 25% 的再预报能捕捉到具有 "非典型 "影响的 SSW 之后的响应。这表明,相对于再分析,再预报在预测 SSW 之后的典型响应方面可能过于自信,尽管这种情况只发生在大约三分之二的事件中。强极地涡旋事件后的气旋预报一般比较成功。了解平流层在冬季风暴轨迹的亚季节变化和可预测性中的作用,可以为中纬度风暴及其地面影响的可靠预报提供一把钥匙。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Stratospheric influence on the winter North Atlantic storm track in subseasonal reforecasts
Abstract. Extreme stratospheric polar vortex events, such as sudden stratospheric warmings (SSWs) or extremely strong polar vortex events, can have a significant impact on surface weather in winter. SSWs are most often associated with negative North Atlantic Oscillation (NAO) conditions, cold air outbreaks in the Arctic and a southward-shifted midlatitude storm track in the North Atlantic, while strong polar vortex events tend to be followed by a positive phase of the NAO, relatively warm conditions in the extratropics and a poleward-shifted storm track. Such changes in the storm track position and associated extratropical cyclone frequency over the North Atlantic and Europe can increase the risk of extreme windstorm, flooding or heavy snowfall over populated regions. Skillful predictions of the downward impact of stratospheric polar vortex extremes can therefore improve the predictability of extratropical winter storms on subseasonal timescales. However, there exists a strong inter-event variability in these downward impacts on the tropospheric storm track. Using ECMWF reanalysis data and reforecasts from the Subseasonal to Seasonal (S2S) Prediction Project database, we investigate the stratospheric influence on extratropical cyclones, identified with a cyclone detection algorithm. Following SSWs, there is an equatorward shift in cyclone frequency over the North Atlantic and Europe in reforecasts, and the opposite response is observed after strong polar vortex events, consistent with the response in reanalysis. However, although the response of cyclone frequency following SSWs with a canonical surface impact is typically captured well during weeks 1–4, less than 25 % of the reforecasts manage to capture the response following SSWs with a “non-canonical” impact. This suggests a possible overconfidence in the reforecasts with respect to reanalysis in predicting the canonical response after SSWs, although it only occurs in about two-thirds of the events. The cyclone forecasts following strong polar vortex events are generally more successful. Understanding the role of the stratosphere in subseasonal variability and predictability of storm tracks during winter can provide a key for reliable forecasts of midlatitude storms and their surface impacts.
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