Pan-Atlantic North American cold spells and European wind extremes in
CMIP6 historical simulations
- Richard Leeding,
- Jacopo Riboldi,
- Gabriele Messori
Jacopo Riboldi
Institute for Atmospheric and Climate Science
Author ProfileAbstract
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This study investigates the representation of near-simultaneous cold and
windy extremes in North America and Europe in an ensemble of historical
climate model simulations as compared to reanalysis. By leveraging a
weather regime perspective, we identify five dynamical pathways for cold
spells in three regions of North America. Three of the pathways also
engender European wind extremes. The pathways are: (i) A wave train
producing central and eastern Canada cold spells, culminating in
Scandinavian blocking. (ii) A persistent Atlantic low producing eastern
Canada cold spells and wind extremes in the British Isles. (iii) A
quasi-stationary wave-2 pattern producing central Canada cold spells and
Scandinavian blocking. (iv) An Arctic high producing eastern United
States cold spells and wind extremes in Iberia. (v) A wave train
producing eastern United States cold spells, culminating in an Atlantic
low and wind extremes in Iberia. Models represent well both the
frequency and evolution of the pathways compared to reanalysis. However,
they under-represent the frequency of pathways (i) and (iii) associated
with Scandinavian blocking. The models perform very well in replicating
mean surface temperature anomalies during cold spells, though they
perform less well on European wind extremes. Typically, the models
capture the region and timing of wind extremes associated with Atlantic
lows, albeit with some under-representation of occurrence frequency, but
fail to adequately capture the wind extremes associated with Arctic
highs. This is linked to deficits in how the models reproduce the
evolution of the dynamical pathways in the East Atlantic.25 Jul 2024Submitted to ESS Open Archive 25 Jul 2024Published in ESS Open Archive