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The impact of Atlantic Ocean variability on North Atlantic storminess and the Northern Hemisphere Jet Stream

The impact of Atlantic Ocean variability on North Atlantic storminess and the Northern Hemisphere Jet Stream
The impact of Atlantic Ocean variability on North Atlantic storminess and the Northern Hemisphere Jet Stream
Tropical cyclones (TC)s are a major natural hazard and the jet stream is closely linked to mid-latitude storm activity. Both TCs and the jet stream can therefore have a significant impact on society, yet the extent to which ocean variability impacts on TCs and the jet stream is far from understood. This thesis aims to improve understanding of when and how the ocean modulates storm activity. The emphasis is on how airsea interactions and variability of the Atlantic Ocean circulation impact on the frequency and intensity of tropical cyclones, together with the ocean influence on the northern hemisphere jet stream. Ocean drivers of recent active Atlantic hurricane seasons are found to take two forms: late winter changes in the ocean circulation related to a reduced Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation and late spring/early summer changes in the airsea heat flux. Over the Atlantic, the TC rainfall rate (mm/hr) increases by 6% for a 1°C SST rise in the Main Development Region (MDR). Over land, however, the rainfall rate increases by over 30% for a 1°C rise in SST in the MDR and appears linked mainly to the increase in TC wind speed. In the subtropical Atlantic, around Bermuda, average TC intensity is found to be increasing at 5kts per decade linked to rising ocean temperatures in the region. The prediction of TC potential intensity is also found to be closer to actual intensity using the average temperature through the top 50m layer (!"#$ %%%%%%) as opposed to SST, with the improvement proportional to the SST - !"#$ %%%%%% temperature difference. For the northern hemisphere jet stream, the ocean acts to reduce the seasonal range of jet latitude variability, particularly over the North Atlantic where the oceanic Meridional Heat Transport (MHT) is greatest. Interannual to decadal variability in jet latitude and speed is most evident in the North Pacific in winter where the Pacific Decadal Oscillation explains 50% of the variance in jet latitude since 1940. On multidecadal timescales trends vary significantly on a regional basis. The largest increasing trends in jet latitude and jet speed are observed in the North Atlantic, with increases in winter of 3° and 4.5ms-1, respectively. There are no trends in jet latitude or speed over the North Pacific.
University of Southampton
Hallam, Samantha
eb391169-69e0-4027-9a22-b7c991d6a13a
Hallam, Samantha
eb391169-69e0-4027-9a22-b7c991d6a13a
Hirschi, Joel
c8a45006-a6e3-4319-b5f5-648e8ef98906

Hallam, Samantha (2021) The impact of Atlantic Ocean variability on North Atlantic storminess and the Northern Hemisphere Jet Stream. University of Southampton, Doctoral Thesis, 179pp.

Record type: Thesis (Doctoral)

Abstract

Tropical cyclones (TC)s are a major natural hazard and the jet stream is closely linked to mid-latitude storm activity. Both TCs and the jet stream can therefore have a significant impact on society, yet the extent to which ocean variability impacts on TCs and the jet stream is far from understood. This thesis aims to improve understanding of when and how the ocean modulates storm activity. The emphasis is on how airsea interactions and variability of the Atlantic Ocean circulation impact on the frequency and intensity of tropical cyclones, together with the ocean influence on the northern hemisphere jet stream. Ocean drivers of recent active Atlantic hurricane seasons are found to take two forms: late winter changes in the ocean circulation related to a reduced Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation and late spring/early summer changes in the airsea heat flux. Over the Atlantic, the TC rainfall rate (mm/hr) increases by 6% for a 1°C SST rise in the Main Development Region (MDR). Over land, however, the rainfall rate increases by over 30% for a 1°C rise in SST in the MDR and appears linked mainly to the increase in TC wind speed. In the subtropical Atlantic, around Bermuda, average TC intensity is found to be increasing at 5kts per decade linked to rising ocean temperatures in the region. The prediction of TC potential intensity is also found to be closer to actual intensity using the average temperature through the top 50m layer (!"#$ %%%%%%) as opposed to SST, with the improvement proportional to the SST - !"#$ %%%%%% temperature difference. For the northern hemisphere jet stream, the ocean acts to reduce the seasonal range of jet latitude variability, particularly over the North Atlantic where the oceanic Meridional Heat Transport (MHT) is greatest. Interannual to decadal variability in jet latitude and speed is most evident in the North Pacific in winter where the Pacific Decadal Oscillation explains 50% of the variance in jet latitude since 1940. On multidecadal timescales trends vary significantly on a regional basis. The largest increasing trends in jet latitude and jet speed are observed in the North Atlantic, with increases in winter of 3° and 4.5ms-1, respectively. There are no trends in jet latitude or speed over the North Pacific.

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Published date: 21 September 2021

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 451502
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/451502
PURE UUID: f6be722f-ab80-4f6d-84f2-055ed7ca4bd8
ORCID for Samantha Hallam: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0003-3418-2554

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Date deposited: 04 Oct 2021 16:33
Last modified: 17 Mar 2024 06:51

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Contributors

Author: Samantha Hallam ORCID iD
Thesis advisor: Joel Hirschi

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