frayadjacent: peach to blue gradient with the silouette of a conifer tree (Default)
fray-adjacent ([personal profile] frayadjacent) wrote2019-02-01 03:42 pm
Entry tags:

Six -- no, seven -- things about the polar vortex

1. The polar vortex is pretty much always there in winter. The strong winds circumnavigating the Arctic -- or Antarctic -- help keep the North/South pole cold and middle latitudes...less cold (as a person who is happiest in the tropics, I can't bring myself to say "warm").

2. The cold weather in the UK and extreme cold in parts of North America right now are due to the polar vortex being disrupted, so that the winds no longer blow from west to east but instead in a wavy pattern: the dip from northwest to southeast, then back up to the northeast, bringing the cold arctic air with them.

3. Breakdowns of the polar vortex are often a consequence of sudden and rapid warming in the stratosphere (which can happen for a number of reasons, including, say, shifts in the location of tropical rainfall due to El Nino -- the atmosphere is complicated). It takes a few weeks for a Sudden Stratospheric Warming (SSW) to lead to a collapse in the polar vortex.

4. This extreme cold event was remarkably well-forecasted because the polar vortex breakdown was preceeded by an SSW: see, e.g., this blog post from late December. The UK Met Office, in early January, wrote in their outlook that late January would be very cold, on the basis of the SSW that was occurring at the time. January proceeded to be anomalously warm, until the end of the month, when temperatures dropped just like they said it would (take that, Daily Mail!).

5. The link between disruptions of the polar vortex and global warming is tenuous, and an area of active research. Some climate scientists argue for a mechanism that would make it more likely, because the poles are warming faster than the rest of the planet. But the evidence for that mechanism has not been fully shown.

6. In the absense of that mechanism, it's more likely that extreme cold events will become less common with global warming*.  It might well be that the cold spells that only come once -- or less than once -- per year in the UK used to happen a couple of times per year, and so now when they happen they seem remarkable and we (those of us who aren't global warming deniers) are inclined to attribue them to climate change. (I'm not applying this argument to what's happening in parts of North America, because my impression is that that's a more rare cold event.)

7. Because SSWs and their associated polar vortex disruptions last for several weeks, there can't be more than two or three of them per winter, so even if global warming does make them more likely, it will probably be hard to show that with any statistical rigor for a long time.

Source: I'm an atmospheric scientist, and a co-author on a peer-reviewed paper on this topic. (But it's not my usual area of research; I joined the project to bring my tropical meteorology expertise.)

*but extreme heat, drought, and flooding are all definitely becoming more common -- I'm not saying that global warming isn't a problem!

jb_slasher: enter shikari; common dreads (Default)

[personal profile] jb_slasher 2019-02-02 01:32 pm (UTC)(link)
I find this very interesting, not to mention topical. Thank you for sharing!
brokenmnemonic: (Lee/Kara Deleted)

[personal profile] brokenmnemonic 2019-02-02 02:57 pm (UTC)(link)
Did you see the BBC news article earlier this week about research indicating that the genocide associated with the colonisation of the US, and the reforestation of previously agricultural land, is likely responsible for a measurable dip in global warming? It was fascinating, in a rather morbid way.
brokenmnemonic: (Serenity Anima)

[personal profile] brokenmnemonic 2019-02-14 07:22 pm (UTC)(link)
This is the article: https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/science-environment-47063973 - they appear to be linking it to the little ice age in the 16th/17th centuries.
oldtoadwoman: Sam Winchester, Supernatural 14x17 (Due South)

cool graphics & chicago weather

[personal profile] oldtoadwoman 2019-02-02 05:16 pm (UTC)(link)
"(I'm not applying this argument to what's happening in parts of North America, because my impression is that that's a more rare cold event.)"

I found neat graphics and few people are nerdy enough to care but I finally get to share them! Everything's in Fahrenheit and inches, sorry, but the numbers don't matter as much as the patterns. This is Chicago O'Hare Airport weather records.

2016 2017 2018 2019

The top part of the graph is daily temps and the bottom part is annual cumulative precipitation (which is why that one only goes up). The navy blue is the actual recorded temp for each given date over a background that shows averages and historical highs and lows. The big chunk of olive green in 2016 and 2017 is indicating below-normal snowfall. (But 2017 also had above average precipitation so it wasn't a lack of water falling from the sky, it just happened to be above freezing more of those days.) You'll note that the most recent dip (chart 4) was definitely the coldest mark for these four years (and one of those days, I think, set a record for being the coldest in ten years… note that it wasn't the coldest ever just the coldest in ten years. Also, note that it wasn't even remotely out of line with those light-blue record-low marks. The actual recorded temperature always bounces up and down, including many colder-than-average days but there have also been many more warmer-than-average days.

No argument that the recent cold snap to hit North America was, to use the specific Chicago term for it, fucking cold, but part of what made it such a shock was that it followed a warmer-than-average December so I literally couldn't find my gloves while running out the door because I haven't needed them in so long.
oldtoadwoman: Sam Winchester, Supernatural 14x17 (Default)

Re: cool graphics & chicago weather

[personal profile] oldtoadwoman 2019-02-14 07:05 pm (UTC)(link)
Yup. (So nice to talk to someone who understands!) And intellectually, I know all of this. Yet on a gut level, my reaction to weather is never rational. It's always a direct response to how today's weather compares with the last week or two. It is currently 43F and that feels so warm. I'm about to dash out and run errands while it's still so warm because it's predicted to get back below freezing tomorrow. But the first 43F day in autumn? That feels freaking cold after you've gotten used to summer. Weather changes constantly and yet we're surprised every time.

We clearly only evolved to respond to the current threat and what happened last month just doesn't matter because everyone reacts to every change as if it's never happened before even if the same thing happened last year.
oldtoadwoman: Sam Winchester, Supernatural 14x17 (stormy weather)

Re: cool graphics & chicago weather

[personal profile] oldtoadwoman 2019-02-16 06:10 pm (UTC)(link)
I think summer tends to be more varied and interesting because you are going places and doing things. Winter is staying inside and reading or watching TV or other things that make you forget about what the weather was like at the time. (If I'm specifically thinking about it, I have many winter memories of slipping on ice on my way to school or climbing over snowbanks, etc. But if you don't prompt me to think about weather and just ask me to randomly give you a childhood memory, it's more likely to be about running around outside in the summer.)

One of my favorite misremembered weather stories was a landlady of mine. For context, she was a little crazy and spoke in absolutes. Everything was either "always" or "never" with very little middle ground. (I felt guilty when she'd tell people how nice I was because I volunteered "all the time" at the local food bank and, for the record, I helped her with two charity events in all the years I lived there.) Anyway, there was a neighborhood fair that a local church put on annually as a fundraiser and it was starting to drizzle and she kept telling, "I can't believe this! It never rains on the fair! Never! Every year it's a bright sunny day! This never happens!" and five minutes later we bumped into another neighbor who was grumbling. "Can you believe this? Every year it ends up raining during the fair! Every single year!" (I have no idea which, if either, of them was correct as I only bothered to attend the one year.)
oldtoadwoman: Sam Winchester, Supernatural 14x17 (Default)

Re: cool graphics & chicago weather

[personal profile] oldtoadwoman 2019-06-14 03:17 pm (UTC)(link)
jesse_the_k: Snowflake pulses white and blue (snowflake GIF)

[personal profile] jesse_the_k 2019-02-02 06:07 pm (UTC)(link)
Thank you for applying science to a topic where recently I've heard nothing but inchoate screaming.

Also it's been -30°C here so I know whereof you speak.



jesse_the_k: That text in red Futura Bold Condensed (be aware of invisibility)

Math, fuckers

[personal profile] jesse_the_k 2019-02-12 10:00 pm (UTC)(link)
Came back to copy Because SSWs and their associated polar vortex disruptions last for several weeks, there can't be more than two or three of them per winter, so even if global warming does make them more likely, it will probably be hard to show that with any statistical rigor for a long time. into a links post because that's SO IMPORTANT!
bironic: Neil Perry gazing out a window at night (Default)

[personal profile] bironic 2019-02-02 08:36 pm (UTC)(link)
What I want to say is *four thumbs-up emoji,* so here is a description of them instead. Quality explanation.
lilacsigil: 12 Apostles rocks, text "Rock On" (12 Apostles)

[personal profile] lilacsigil 2019-02-02 11:51 pm (UTC)(link)
This is super interesting. Also it's only 10am and already 32C here, so I'll take this reminder to go look at some pictures of snow and ice!
alwaystheocean: black and white image of Elizabeth Taylor as Cleopatra, text: an almost all greek thing (Default)

[personal profile] alwaystheocean 2019-02-07 09:49 am (UTC)(link)
This is so excellent, thank you for sharing!

Also:

as a person who is happiest in the tropics, I can't bring myself to say "warm"

how did I not know we had this in common hi
tinny: A pink cherry blossom - "Zen" (__zen pink cherry blossom)

[personal profile] tinny 2019-02-08 09:50 am (UTC)(link)
Awesome! Thank you!