Journal article

Midlatitude winter extreme temperature events and connections with anomalies in the arctic and tropics

I Rudeva, I Simmonds

Journal of Climate | AMER METEOROLOGICAL SOC | Published : 2021

Abstract

For the last few decades the Northern Hemisphere midlatitudes have seen an increasing number of temperature extreme events. It has been suggested that some of these extremes are related to planetary wave activity. In this study we identify wave propagation regions at 300 hPa using the ERA-Interim dataset from 1980 to 2017 and link them to temperature extremes in densely populated regions of the Northern Hemisphere. Most studies have used background flow fields at monthly or seasonal scale to investigate wave propagation. For a phenomenon that is influenced by threshold incidents and nonlinear processes, this can distort the net Rossby wave signal. A novel aspect of our investigation lies in ..

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University of Melbourne Researchers

Grants

Awarded by Department of Environment, Land, Water and Planning, State Government of Victoria


Funding Acknowledgements

We thank three anonymous reviewers for their very constructive comments on the previous version of this paper that helped significantly improve the manuscript. We thank James Screen for his input at the early stage of this work. We also thank Guomin Wang and Roseanna McKay for their comments on the first draft. This research was supported by an Australian Research Council grant (DP160101997) and the Department of Environment, Land, Water and Planning through the Victorian Water and Climate Initiative.