Dozenten: Prof. Dr. T. Leisner, Prof. Dr. P. Braesicke, Prof. Dr. A. Fink, PD Dr. M. Höpfner, Prof. Dr. C. Hoose, Prof. Dr. P. Knippertz, PD Dr. M. Kunz, Prof. Dr. J. Pinto
Veranstaltungskalender
Dynamics of Sudden Stratospheric Warmings
Sudden stratospheric warmings (SSWs) are midwinter events in which the
primary stratospheric circulation, which is characterised by a strong
cyclonic vortex over the polar cap, abruptly breaks down leading to an
explosive warming of the polar stratosphere. SSWs modify the circulation
throughout the stratospheric column. Furthermore, it is now well established
that they tend to modify the large-scale circulation near the surface for up
to 2 months following the stratospheric event. Fundamentally, SSWs are a
manifestation of anomalously strong two-way interactions between upward
propagating planetary waves and the mean flow. However, the conditions that
trigger anomalously strong wave-mean flow coupling leading to an SSW are
still not well understood. While tropospheric precursors to SSWs have often
been noted (e.g., blocking), SSWs have also been shown to spontaneously
arise due to fortuitous coupling of a fixed wave field provided by the
troposphere and the concurrently evolving state of the stratosphere. Here we
present evidence based on reanalysis data and climate model simulations that
the explosive dynamics associated with SSWs primarily take place within the
stratosphere. Anomalous upward wave fluxes from the lower troposphere may
play a role for some events, but seem less important for the majority of
them. The crucial dynamics for forcing SSWs appear to take place across the
''communication layer'' just above the tropopause. Consequences for
stratosphere-troposphere coupling will be discussed.
https://www.imk-asf.kit.edu/
Dr. Thomas Birner
Meteorologisches Institut, LMU München
IMK-ASF Administration
IMK-ASF
KIT
Karlsruhe
Tel: +49 721 608-28271
E-Mail: sekretariat ∂ imk-asf kit edu
Wissenschaftliche Mitarbeitende
Hinweise
"CS" - KIT-Campus Süd (Universität), Gebäude 30.23 (Physikhochhaus), Seminarraum 13/2
"CN" - KIT-Campus Nord (Forschungszentrum), Gebäude 435 (IMK), Raum 2.05
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