Simulations of dynamics and transport during the September 2002 Antarctic major warming

被引:62
作者
Manney, GL [1 ]
Sabutis, JL
Allen, DR
Lahoz, WA
Scaife, AA
Randall, CE
Pawson, S
Naujokat, B
Swinbank, R
机构
[1] New Mexico Highlands Univ, Dept Nat Sci, Las Vegas, NM 87701 USA
[2] CALTECH, Jet Propuls Lab, Pasadena, CA 91125 USA
[3] New Mexico Highlands Univ, Sch Educ, Las Vegas, NM 87701 USA
[4] New Mexico Highlands Univ, Dept Math Sci, Las Vegas, NM 87701 USA
[5] USN, Res Lab, Remote Sensing Div, Washington, DC 20375 USA
[6] Univ Reading, Data Asimilat Res Ctr, Dept Meteorol, Reading, Berks, England
[7] Meteorol Off, Exeter, Devon, England
[8] Univ Colorado, Atmospher & Space Phys Lab, Boulder, CO 80309 USA
[9] Univ Maryland Baltimore Cty, Goddard Earth Sci & Technol Ctr, Baltimore, MD 21228 USA
[10] NASA, Goddard Space Flight Ctr, Greenbelt, MD 20771 USA
[11] Free Univ Berlin, Inst Meteorol, D-1000 Berlin, Germany
关键词
D O I
10.1175/JAS-3313.1
中图分类号
P4 [大气科学(气象学)];
学科分类号
0706 ; 070601 ;
摘要
A mechanistic model simulation initialized on 14 September 2002, forced by 100-hPa geopotential heights from Met Office analyses, reproduced the dynamical features of the 2002 Antarctic major warming. The vortex split on similar to 25 September; recovery after the warming, westward and equatorward tilting vortices, and strong baroclinic zones in temperature associated with a dipole pattern of upward and downward vertical velocities were all captured in the simulation. Model results and analyses show a pattern of strong upward wave propagation throughout the warming, with zonal wind deceleration throughout the stratosphere at high latitudes before the vortex split, continuing in the middle and upper stratosphere and spreading to lower latitudes after the split. Three-dimensional Eliassen-Palm fluxes show the largest upward and poleward wave propagation in the 0 degrees-90 degrees E sector prior to the vortex split (coincident with the location of strongest cyclogenesis at the model's lower boundary), with an additional region of strong upward propagation developing near 180 degrees-270 degrees E. These characteristics are similar to those of Arctic wave-2 major warmings, except that during this warming, the vortex did not split below similar to 600 K. The effects of poleward transport and mixing dominate modeled trace gas evolution through most of the mid- to high-latitude stratosphere, with a core region in the lower-stratospheric vortex where enhanced descent dominates and the vortex remains isolated. Strongly tilted vortices led to low-latitude air overlying vortex air, resulting in highly unusual trace gas profiles. Simulations driven with several meteorological datasets reproduced the major warming, but in others, stronger latitudinal gradients at high latitudes at the model boundary resulted in simulations without a complete vortex split in the midstratosphere. Numerous tests indicate very high sensitivity to the boundary fields, especially the wave-2 amplitude. Major warmings occurred for initial fields with stronger winds and larger vortices, but not smaller vortices, consistent with the initiation of wind deceleration by upward-propagating waves near the poleward edge of the region where wave 2 can propagate above the jet core. Thus, given the observed 100-hPa boundary forcing, stratospheric preconditioning is not needed to reproduce a major warming similar to that observed. The anomalously strong forcing in the lower stratosphere can be viewed as the primary direct cause of the major warming.
引用
收藏
页码:690 / 707
页数:18
相关论文
共 67 条
[1]   Unusual stratospheric transport and mixing during the 2002 Antarctic winter [J].
Allen, DR ;
Bevilacqua, RM ;
Nedoluha, GE ;
Randall, CE ;
Manney, GL .
GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH LETTERS, 2003, 30 (12) :1-1
[2]  
Andrews D., 1987, INT GEOPHYS
[3]  
Baldwin M., 2003, SPARC NEWSL, V20, P24
[4]  
BUTCHART N, 1982, Q J ROY METEOR SOC, V108, P475, DOI 10.1002/qj.49710845702
[5]   The splitting of the stratospheric polar vortex in the Southern Hemisphere, September 2002: Dynamical evolution [J].
Charlton, AJ ;
O'Neill, A ;
Lahoz, WA ;
Berrisford, P .
JOURNAL OF THE ATMOSPHERIC SCIENCES, 2005, 62 (03) :590-602
[6]  
Cohn SE, 1998, MON WEATHER REV, V126, P2913, DOI 10.1175/1520-0493(1998)126<2913:ATEODS>2.0.CO
[7]  
2
[8]   Evaluation of transport in the lower tropical stratosphere in a global chemistry and transport model [J].
Douglass, AR ;
Schoeberl, MR ;
Rood, RB ;
Pawson, S .
JOURNAL OF GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH-ATMOSPHERES, 2003, 108 (D9)
[9]   EVOLUTION OF POTENTIAL VORTICITY IN THE WINTER STRATOSPHERE OF JANUARY FEBRUARY 1979 [J].
DUNKERTON, TJ ;
DELISI, DP .
JOURNAL OF GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH-ATMOSPHERES, 1986, 91 (D1) :1199-1208
[10]   THE STRATOSPHERIC MAJOR WARMING OF WINTER 1984/85 - OBSERVATIONS AND DYNAMICAL INFERENCES [J].
FAIRLIE, TDA ;
ONEILL, A .
QUARTERLY JOURNAL OF THE ROYAL METEOROLOGICAL SOCIETY, 1988, 114 (481) :557-578