Contrasting Deep and Shallow Winter Warming over the Barents-Kara Seas on the Intraseasonal Time Scale
编号:148
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更新:2025-11-06 17:11:17 浏览:8次
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摘要
The vertical structure of Arctic warming is of great importance and attracts increasing attention. This study defines two types of Arctic warming events (deep versus shallow) according to their temperature profiles averaged over the Barents–Kara Seas (BKS), and thereupon compares their characteristics and examines their difference in generation through thermodynamic diagnoses. A deep Arctic warming event—characterized by significant bottom-heavy warming extending from the surface into the middle-to-upper troposphere—emanates from the east of Greenland and then moves downstream toward the BKS primarily through zonal temperature advection. The peak day of deep warming event lags that of the precipitation and resultant diabatic heating over southeast Greenland by about four days, suggesting that the middle-to-high tropospheric BKS warming is likely triggered by the enhanced upstream convection at the North Atlantic high latitudes. In contrast, a shallow warming event—manifested by warming confined within the lower troposphere—is preceded by the meridional advection of warm air from inland Eurasia. These anomalous southerlies over Eurasian lands during shallow warming events are related to the eastward extension of the deepened Icelandic low. During deep warming events, the in-situ reinforcement of the Icelandic low favors abundant moisture transport interplaying with the southeast Greenland terrain, leading to intense precipitation and latent heat release there. Both deep and shallow warming events are accompanied by Eurasian cooling, but the corresponding cooling of the deep warming event is stronger.
关键词
Arctic,thermodynamics,intraseasonal variability
稿件作者
Li Juncong
Fudan University
Xiaodan Chen
Fudan University
Yuanyuan Guo
Fudan University
Zhiping Wen
Fudan University
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