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contributor authorSobolowski, Stefan
contributor authorGong, Gavin
contributor authorTing, Mingfang
date accessioned2017-06-09T16:34:41Z
date available2017-06-09T16:34:41Z
date copyright2011/04/01
date issued2010
identifier issn0022-4928
identifier otherams-70319.pdf
identifier urihttp://onlinelibrary.yabesh.ir/handle/yetl/4212087
description abstractontinental-scale snow cover represents a broad thermal forcing on monthly-to-intraseasonal time scales, with the potential to modify local and remote atmospheric circulation. A previous GCM study reported robust transient-eddy responses to prescribed anomalous North American (NA) snow cover. The same set of experiments also indicated a robust upper-level stationary wave response during spring, but the nature of this response was not investigated until now. Here, the authors diagnose a deep, snow-induced, tropospheric cooling over NA and hypothesize that this may represent a pathway linking snow to the stationary wave response. A nonlinear stationary wave model is shown to reproduce the GCM stationary wave response to snow more accurately than a linear model, and results confirm that diabatic cooling is the primary driver of the stationary wave response. In particular, the total nonlinear effects due to cooling, and its interactions with transient eddies and orography, are shown to be essential for faithful reproduction of the GCM response. The nonlinear model results confirm that direct effects due to transients and orography are modest. However, with interactions between forcings included, the total effects due to these terms make important contributions to the total response. Analysis of observed NA snow cover and stationary waves is qualitatively similar to the patterns generated by the GCM and linear/nonlinear stationary wave models, indicating that the snow-induced signal is not simply a modeling artifact. The diagnosis and description of a snow?stationary wave relationship adds to the understanding of stationary waves and their forcing mechanisms, and this relationship suggests that large-scale changes in the land surface state may exert considerable influence on the atmosphere over hemispheric scales and thereby contribute to climate variability.
publisherAmerican Meteorological Society
titleInvestigating the Linear and Nonlinear Stationary Wave Response to Anomalous North American Snow Cover
typeJournal Paper
journal volume68
journal issue4
journal titleJournal of the Atmospheric Sciences
identifier doi10.1175/2010JAS3581.1
journal fristpage904
journal lastpage917
treeJournal of the Atmospheric Sciences:;2010:;Volume( 068 ):;issue: 004
contenttypeFulltext


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