This site uses cookies, tags, and tracking settings to store information that help give you the very best browsing experience. Dismiss this warning

Suppression of cold air outbreaks over the interior of North America in a warmer climate

Kara Hartig aDepartment of Physics, Harvard University, Cambridge, MA

Search for other papers by Kara Hartig in
Current site
Google Scholar
PubMed
Close
and
Eli Tziperman bDepartment of Earth and Planetary Sciences and School of Engineering and Applied Sciences, Harvard University, Cambridge, MA

Search for other papers by Eli Tziperman in
Current site
Google Scholar
PubMed
Close
Full access

Abstract

In spite of the mean warming trend over the last few decades and its amplification in the Arctic, some studies have found no robust decline or even a slight increase in wintertime cold air outbreaks over North America. But fossil evidence from warmer paleoclimate periods indicates that the interior of North America never dropped below freezing even in the depths of winter, which implies that the maintenance of cold air outbreaks is unlikely to continue indefinitely with future warming. To identify key mechanisms affecting cold air outbreaks and understand how and why they will change in a warmer climate, we examine the development of North American cold air outbreaks in both a pre-industrial and a roughly 8×CO2 scenario using the Community Earth System Model, CESM2. We observe a sharp drop-off in the wintertime temperature distribution at the freezing temperature, suppressing below-freezing conditions in the warmer climate and above-freezing conditions in the pre-industrial case. The disappearance of Arctic sea ice and loss of the near-surface temperature inversion dramatically decrease the availability of below-freezing air in source regions. Using an air parcel trajectory analysis, we demonstrate a remarkable similarity in both the dynamics and diabatic effects acting on cold air masses in the two climate scenarios. Diabatic temperature evolution along cold air outbreak trajectories is a competition between cooling from longwave radiation and warming from boundary layer mixing. Surprisingly, while both diabatic effects strengthen in the warmer climate, the balance remains the same, with a net cooling of about −6 K over 10 days.

© 2024 American Meteorological Society. This is an Author Accepted Manuscript distributed under the terms of the default AMS reuse license. For information regarding reuse and general copyright information, consult the AMS Copyright Policy (www.ametsoc.org/PUBSReuseLicenses).

Corresponding author: Kara Hartig, [email protected]

Abstract

In spite of the mean warming trend over the last few decades and its amplification in the Arctic, some studies have found no robust decline or even a slight increase in wintertime cold air outbreaks over North America. But fossil evidence from warmer paleoclimate periods indicates that the interior of North America never dropped below freezing even in the depths of winter, which implies that the maintenance of cold air outbreaks is unlikely to continue indefinitely with future warming. To identify key mechanisms affecting cold air outbreaks and understand how and why they will change in a warmer climate, we examine the development of North American cold air outbreaks in both a pre-industrial and a roughly 8×CO2 scenario using the Community Earth System Model, CESM2. We observe a sharp drop-off in the wintertime temperature distribution at the freezing temperature, suppressing below-freezing conditions in the warmer climate and above-freezing conditions in the pre-industrial case. The disappearance of Arctic sea ice and loss of the near-surface temperature inversion dramatically decrease the availability of below-freezing air in source regions. Using an air parcel trajectory analysis, we demonstrate a remarkable similarity in both the dynamics and diabatic effects acting on cold air masses in the two climate scenarios. Diabatic temperature evolution along cold air outbreak trajectories is a competition between cooling from longwave radiation and warming from boundary layer mixing. Surprisingly, while both diabatic effects strengthen in the warmer climate, the balance remains the same, with a net cooling of about −6 K over 10 days.

© 2024 American Meteorological Society. This is an Author Accepted Manuscript distributed under the terms of the default AMS reuse license. For information regarding reuse and general copyright information, consult the AMS Copyright Policy (www.ametsoc.org/PUBSReuseLicenses).

Corresponding author: Kara Hartig, [email protected]
Save