| Literature DB >> 30931245 |
J A Screen1, T J Bracegirdle2, I Simmonds3.
Abstract
PURPOSE OF REVIEW: Dynamic manifestations of climate change, i.e. those related to circulation, are less well understood than are thermodynamic, or temperature-related aspects. However, this knowledge gap is narrowing. We review recent progress in understanding the causes of observed changes in polar tropospheric and stratospheric circulation, and in interpreting climate model projections of their future changes. RECENTEntities:
Keywords: Annular modes; Antarctic; Arctic; Climate change; Cyclones; Stratospheric polar vortex
Year: 2018 PMID: 30931245 PMCID: PMC6411204 DOI: 10.1007/s40641-018-0111-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Curr Clim Change Rep
Fig. 1Indices of the Northern Annular Mode (left) and Southern Annular Mode (right) from observations and models. The black line shows, for each season (top to bottom), the CMIP5 multi-model mean of historical and RCP4.5 simulations. The grey band shows the 5–95% confidence range based on the individual model simulations. The coloured lines show observational indices derived from HadSLP2 (red), NOAA-CIRES Twentieth Century Reanalysis (orange) and Japanese 55-year Reanalysis (blue). Simulated anomalies are shown relative to the 1861–1900 baseline, and observations are centred on the multi-model mean over the period for which they are shown. The symbols to the right of each line graph show changes between 1980–2029 and 2050–2099, for each individual model (black circles) and the multi-model mean (red line). Adapted from Gillett and Fyfe (2013), where further details on these data and methods can be found [34]