Environmental Research Letters (Jan 2017)

Extreme cyclone events in the Arctic: Wintertime variability and trends

  • A Rinke,
  • M Maturilli,
  • R M Graham,
  • H Matthes,
  • D Handorf,
  • L Cohen,
  • S R Hudson,
  • J C Moore

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1088/1748-9326/aa7def
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12, no. 9
p. 094006

Abstract

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Typically 20–40 extreme cyclone events (sometimes called ‘weather bombs’) occur in the Arctic North Atlantic per winter season, with an increasing trend of 6 events/decade over 1979–2015, according to 6 hourly station data from Ny-Ålesund. This increased frequency of extreme cyclones is consistent with observed significant winter warming, indicating that the meridional heat and moisture transport they bring is a factor in rising temperatures in the region. The winter trend in extreme cyclones is dominated by a positive monthly trend of about 3–4 events/decade in November–December, due mainly to an increasing persistence of extreme cyclone events. A negative trend in January opposes this, while there is no significant trend in February. We relate the regional patterns of the trend in extreme cyclones to anomalously low sea-ice conditions in recent years, together with associated large-scale atmospheric circulation changes such as ‘blockinglike’ circulation patterns (e.g. Scandinavian blocking in December and Ural blocking during January–February).

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