01.02.2012
New Study: Correlation Between Summer Arctic Sea Ice Cover and Winter Weather in Central Europe
Even if the current weather situation may seem to speak against it, the probability of cold winters with much snow in Central Europe rises when the Arctic is covered by less sea ice in summer.
Source: (idw) AWIScientists of the Research Unit Potsdam of the Alfred Wegener Institute
for Polar and Marine Research in the Helmholtz Association have
decrypted a mechanism in which a shrinking summertime sea ice cover
changes the air pressure zones in the Arctic atmosphere and impacts our
European winter weather. These results of a global climate analysis
were recently published in a study in the scientific journal Tellus A.
If
there is a particularly large-scale melt of Arctic sea ice in summer,
as observed in recent years, two important effects are intensified.
Firstly, the retreat of the light ice surface reveals the darker ocean,
causing it to warm up more in summer from the solar radiation
(ice-albedo feedback mechanism). Secondly, the diminished ice cover can
no longer prevent the heat stored in the ocean being released into the
atmosphere (lid effect). As a result of the decreased sea ice cover the
air is warmed more greatly than it used to be particularly in autumn
and winter because during this period the ocean is warmer than the
atmosphere. "These higher temperatures can be proven by current
measurements from the Arctic regions", reports Ralf Jaiser, lead author
of the publication from the Research Unit Potsdam of the Alfred Wegener
Institute.
The warming of the air near to the ground leads to
rising movements and the atmosphere becomes less stable. “We have
analysed the complex non-linear processes behind this destabilisation
and have shown how these altered conditions in the Arctic influence the
typical circulation and air pressure patterns", explains Jaiser. One of
these patterns is the air pressure difference between the Arctic and
mid-latitudes: the so-called Arctic oscillation with the Azores highs
and Iceland lows known from the weather reports. If this difference is
high, a strong westerly wind will result which in winter carries warm
and humid Atlantic air masses right down to Europe. If the wind does
not come, cold Arctic air can penetrate down through to Europe, as was
the case in the last two winters. Model calculations show that the air
pressure difference with decreased sea ice cover in the Arctic summer
is weakened in the following winter, enabling Arctic cold to push down
to mid-latitudes.
Despite the low sea ice cover in summer 2011,
a cold winter with much snow has so far not occurred here in Germany.
Jaiser explains this as follows: "Many other factors naturally play a
role in the complex climate system of our Earth which overlap in part.
Our results explain the mechanisms of how regional changes in the
Arctic sea ice cover have a global impact and their effects over a
period from late summer to winter. Other mechanisms are linked, for
example, with the snow cover in Siberia or tropical influences. The
interactions between these influential factors will be the subject
matter of future research work and therefore represent a factor of
uncertainty in forecasts.”
To access the original article see:
http://www.tellusa.net/index.php/tellusa/article/view/11595
It is the aim of the Potsdam researchers to find and analyse
further mechanisms and to correctly show the Earth’s climate system
with the help of these mechanisms in models. “Our work contributes to
reducing the existing uncertainties of the global climate model and
developing more credible regional climate scenarios – an important
foundation to enable people to adjust to the altered conditions”,
explains Prof. Dr. Klaus Dethloff, Head of the Atmospheric Circulation
Section at the Research Unit Potsdam of the Alfred Wegener Institute.
Further Information:
http://www.awi.de/en/home/