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Atlantic origin of the increasing Asian westerly jet interannual variability. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • The summer Eurasian westerly jet is becoming weaker and wavier, leading to more frequent weather extremes, though the main cause is still under debate.
  • A significant 140% increase in interannual variability of the East Asian jet (EAJ) since the late 20th century is linked to changes in large-scale circulation patterns across Eurasia, resulting in notable climate impacts like heatwaves and monsoon shifts.
  • The Scandinavian pattern from February plays a major role in this variability, suggesting a connection between oceanic and atmospheric conditions, although advanced climate models don't show similar circulation changes, indicating that much of the EAJ's recent variability may be due to natural fluctuations rather than human activity.

Article Abstract

The summer Eurasian westerly jet is reported to become weaker and wavier, thus promoting the frequent weather extremes. However, the primary driver of the changing jet stream remains in debate, mainly due to the regionality and seasonality of the Eurasian jet. Here we report a sharp increase, by approximately 140%, in the interannual variability of the summertime East Asian jet (EAJ) since the end of twentieth century. Such interdecadal change induces considerable changes in the large-scale circulation pattern across Eurasia, and consequently weather and climate extremes including heatwaves, droughts, and Asian monsoonal rainfall regime shifts. The trigger mainly emerges from preceding February North Atlantic seesaw called Scandinavian pattern (contributing to 81.1 ± 2.9% of the enhanced EAJ variability), which harnesses the "cross-seasonal-coupled oceanic-atmospheric bridge" to exert a delayed impact on EAJ and thus aids relevant predictions five months in advance. However, projections from state-of-the-art models with prescribed anthropogenic forcing exhibit no similar circulation changes. This sheds light on that, at the interannual timescale, a substantial portion of recently increasing variability in the East Asian sector of the Eurasian westerly jet arises from unforced natural variability.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10925044PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41467-024-46543-xDOI Listing

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