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Basin-dependent response of Northern Hemisphere winter blocking frequency to CO2 removal

Authors :
National Research Foundation of Korea
Korea Institute of Science and Technology
Japan Society for the Promotion of Science
Ministerio de Ciencia e Innovación (España)
0009-0009-2514-7109
0000-0003-2982-9501
0000-0002-2370-6765
0000-0002-7659-6571
0000-0001-6476-944X
0000-0002-0003-429X
0000-0003-4549-1686
0000-0002-6749-010X
0000-0003-2251-2579
0000-0002-3199-7646
Hwang, Jaeyoung
Son, Seok Woo
Martineau, Patrick
Sung, Mi Kyung
Barriopedro, David
An, Soon Il
Yeh, Sang Wook
Min, Seung Ki
Kug, Jong Seong
Shin, Jongsoo
National Research Foundation of Korea
Korea Institute of Science and Technology
Japan Society for the Promotion of Science
Ministerio de Ciencia e Innovación (España)
0009-0009-2514-7109
0000-0003-2982-9501
0000-0002-2370-6765
0000-0002-7659-6571
0000-0001-6476-944X
0000-0002-0003-429X
0000-0003-4549-1686
0000-0002-6749-010X
0000-0003-2251-2579
0000-0002-3199-7646
Hwang, Jaeyoung
Son, Seok Woo
Martineau, Patrick
Sung, Mi Kyung
Barriopedro, David
An, Soon Il
Yeh, Sang Wook
Min, Seung Ki
Kug, Jong Seong
Shin, Jongsoo
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

Atmospheric blocking has been identified as one of the key elements of the extratropical atmospheric variabilities, controlling extreme weather events in mid-latitudes. Future projections indicate that Northern Hemisphere winter blocking frequency may decrease as CO2 concentrations increase. Here, we show that such changes may not be reversed when CO2 concentrations return to the current levels. Blocking frequency instead exhibits basin-dependent changes in response to CO2 removal. While the North Atlantic blocking frequency recovers gradually from the CO2-induced eastward shift, the North Pacific blocking frequency under the CO2 removal remains lower than its initial state. These basin-dependent blocking frequency changes result from background flow changes and their interactions with high-frequency eddies. Both high-frequency eddy and background flow changes determine North Atlantic blocking changes, whereas high-frequency eddy changes dominate the slow recovery of North Pacific blocking. Our results indicate that blocking-related extreme events in the Northern Hemisphere winter may not monotonically respond to CO2 removal.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Notes :
English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1442728017
Document Type :
Electronic Resource