6533b858fe1ef96bd12b6419

RESEARCH PRODUCT

Relationship between weather regimes and atmospheric rivers in East Antarctica.

Jonathan WilleDanielle G. UdyJulien PergaudTessa VanceGerhard KrinnerNiels DutrievozJuliette BlanchetCharles AmoryCharles AmoryFrancis CodronBenjamin PohlVincent FavierChristoph Kittel

subject

Atmospheric Science010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciencesEast antarctica15. Life on land010502 geochemistry & geophysics01 natural sciencesGeophysicsOceanography13. Climate actionSpace and Planetary Science[SDU.STU.CL]Sciences of the Universe [physics]/Earth Sciences/ClimatologyEarth and Planetary Sciences (miscellaneous)Geology0105 earth and related environmental sciences

description

25 pages; International audience; Here, we define weather regimes in the East Antarctica—Southern Ocean sector based on daily anomalies of 700 hPa geopotential height derived from ERA5 reanalysis during 1979–2018. Most regimes and their preferred transitions depict synoptic-scale disturbances propagating eastwards off the Antarctic coastline. While regime sequences are generally short, their interannual variability is strongly driven by the polarity of the Southern Annular Mode (SAM). Regime occurrences are then intersected with atmospheric rivers (ARs) detected over the same region and period. ARs are equiprobable throughout the year, but clearly concentrate during regimes associated with a strong atmospheric ridges/blockings on the eastern part of the domain, which act to channel meridional advection of heat and moisture from the lower latitudes towards Antarctica. Both regimes and ARs significantly shape climate variability in Antarctica. Regimes favorable to AR occurrences are associated with anomalously warm and humid conditions in coastal Antarctica and, to a lesser extent, the hinterland parts of the Antarctic plateau. These anomalies are strongly enhanced during AR events, with warmer anomalies and dramatically amplified snowfall amounts. Large-scale conditions favoring AR development are finally explored. They show weak dependency to the SAM, but particularly strong atmospheric ridges/blockings over the Southern Ocean appear as the most favorable pattern, in which ARs can be embedded, and to which they contribute.

10.1029/2021jd035294https://hal.science/hal-03498573