Cambios en la frecuencia de los Regímenes de Tiempo sobre la región Euro-Atlántica y Mediterránea y su relación con las temperaturas anómalas sobre el Mar Mediterráneo

  1. Polo, Irene
  2. Ullmann, Albin
  3. Fontaine, Bernard
  4. Losada Doval, Teresa
  5. Roucou, Pascal
Revista:
Física de la tierra

ISSN: 0214-4557

Año de publicación: 2013

Título del ejemplar: Climate variability and teleconnections in West Africa and the Mediterranean

Número: 25

Páginas: 103-121

Tipo: Artículo

Otras publicaciones en: Física de la tierra

Resumen

An exercise has been carried out to assess to what extent the Euro-Atlantic Weather Regimes (WR), described from the ERA-interim Reanalysis in the summer season, projects onto a pool of AGCMAMIP simulations in which sea surface temperatures (SST) are prescribed from observations. Although the model simulations present some biases in the spatial structure and seasonality of WRs, exhibiting also less variability, they are able to capture main WR over the region in summer season: +Middle East �Middle East, +NAO, -NAO. WR paradigm is used to quantify changes in the atmosphere under warmer/colder than normal conditions over the Mediterranean Sea. To address this problem, firstly, changes in the frequency and spatial pattern are evaluated versus the spread of the ensemble. A change in the spatial pattern of �NAO is found with higher (lower) pressures centred over France when conditions over the Mediterranean are warmer (colder) than normal. Changes in frequency in the ensemble mean along the season are also evaluated and compared with the signal to noise ratio over the whole season. When temperatures over Mediterranean Sea are warmer (colder) than normal significant changes of WR frequency are: i) more (less) frequency for the -Middle East in June/July ii) shift of the frequency of occurrence for the WR associated with +NAO and iii) less (more) occurrence of �NAO in September-October. Despite the limitation, the analysis suggests that extreme conditions over the Mediterranean basin could modulate WR frequencies, which could have an impact on European weather conditions. Further analysis need to be performed in order to isolate the atmosphere variability forced by the Mediterranean Sea.