Tropospheric forcing of the boreal polar vortex splitting in January 2003
Peters D.1, P.Vargin2, A.Gabriel1, N.Tsvetkova 2 and V.Yushkov2
1. Leibniz Institute for Atmospheric Physics at the University of Rostock, Kuhlungsborn, Mecklenburg, Germany
2. Central Aerological Observatory, Dolgoprudny, Moscow region, Russia
Annales Geophysicae, 28, p.1–16, 2010.
http://www.ann-geophys.net/28/1/2010/
Abstract
The dynamical evolution of the relatively warm
stratospheric winter season 2002–2003 in the Northern
Hemisphere was studied and compared with the cold winter
2004–2005 based on NCEP-Reanalyses. Record low temperatures
were observed in the lower and middle stratosphere
over the Arctic region only at the beginning of the 2002–2003
winter. Six sudden stratospheric warming events, including
the major warming event with a splitting of the polar vortex
in mid-January 2003, have been identified. This led to a very
high vacillation of the zonal mean circulation and a weakening
of the stratospheric polar vortex over the whole winter
season. An estimate of the mean chemical ozone destruction
inside the polar vortex showed a total ozone loss of about
45DU in winter 2002–2003; that is about 2.5 times smaller
than in winter 2004–2005.
Embedded in a winter with high wave activity, we found
two subtropical Rossby wave trains in the troposphere before
the major sudden stratospheric warming event in January
2003. These Rossby waves propagated north-eastwards
and maintained two upper tropospheric anticyclones. At the
same time, the amplification of an upward propagating planetary
wave 2 in the upper troposphere and lower stratosphere
was observed, which could be caused primarily by those two
wave trains. Furthermore, two extratropical Rossby wave
trains over the North Pacific Ocean and North America were
identified a couple of days later, which contribute mainly to
the vertical planetary wave activity flux just before and during
the major warming event. It is shown that these different
tropospheric forcing processes caused the major warming
event and contributed to the splitting of the polar vortex.