The Impact of a Changing Southern Hemisphere Annular Mode on Antarctic Peninsula Summer Temperatures

Author:

Marshall Gareth J.1,Orr Andrew2,van Lipzig Nicole P. M.3,King John C.1

Affiliation:

1. British Antarctic Survey, Natural Environment Research Council, Cambridge, United Kingdom

2. Department of Space and Climate Physics, University College London, London, United Kingdom

3. Physical and Regional Geography Research Group, K.U. Leuven, Leuven, Belgium

Abstract

Abstract Since the mid-1960s, rapid regional summer warming has occurred on the east coast of the northern Antarctic Peninsula, with near-surface temperatures increasing by more than 2°C. This warming has contributed significantly to the collapse of the northern sections of the Larsen Ice Shelf. Coincident with this warming, the summer Southern Hemisphere Annular Mode (SAM) has exhibited a marked trend, suggested by modeling studies to be predominantly a response to anthropogenic forcing, resulting in increased westerlies across the northern peninsula. Observations and reanalysis data are utilized to demonstrate that the changing SAM has played a key role in driving this local summer warming. It is proposed that the stronger summer westerly winds reduce the blocking effect of the Antarctic Peninsula and lead to a higher frequency of air masses being advected eastward over the orographic barrier of the northern Antarctic Peninsula. When this occurs, a combination of a climatological temperature gradient across the barrier and the formation of a föhn wind on the lee side typically results in a summer near-surface temperature sensitivity to the SAM that is 3 times greater on the eastern side of the peninsula than on the west. SAM variability is also shown to play a less important role in determining summer temperatures at stations west of the barrier in the northern peninsula (∼62°S), both at the surface and throughout the troposphere. This is in contrast to a station farther south (∼65°S) where the SAM exerts little influence.

Publisher

American Meteorological Society

Subject

Atmospheric Science

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