KOPRI Repository

The extraordinary March 2022 East Antarctica “heat” wave. Part I: observations and meteorological drivers

Cited 0 time in wos
Cited 0 time in scopus
Title
The extraordinary March 2022 East Antarctica “heat” wave. Part I: observations and meteorological drivers
Other Titles
2022년 3월 동남극에서 발생한 이례적인 열파. 1: 관측과 기상학적 동인
Authors
Jonathan D. Wille
Simon P. Alexander
Charles Amory
Rebecca Baiman
Leonard Barthelemy
Dana M. Bergstrom
Alexis Berne
Hanin Binder
Juliette Blanchet
Deniz Bozkurt
Thomas J. Bracegirdle
Mathieu Casado
Choi, Taejin
Kyle R. Clem
Francis Codron
Rajashree Datta
Stefano Di Battista
Vincent Favier
Diana Francis
Alexander D. Fraser
Elise Fourre
Rene D. Garreaud
Christophe Genthon
Irina V. Gorodetskaya
Sergi Gonzalez-Herrero
Victoria J. Heinrich
Guillaume Hubert
Hanna Joos
Kim, Seong-Joong
John C. King
Christoph Kittel
Amaelle Landais
Matthew Lazzara
Gregory H. Leonard
Jan L. Lieser
Michelle Maclennan
David Mikolajczyk
Peter Neff
Ines Ollivier
Ghislain Picard
Benjamin Pohl
Martin F. Ralph
Penny Rowe
Elisabeth Schlosser
Christine A. Shields
Inga J. Smith
Michael Sprenger
Luke Trusel
Danielle Udy
Tessa Vance
Etienne Vignon
Catherine Walker
Nander Wever
Xun Zou
Keywords
Atmospheric riverEast AntarcticaHeat waveIndian Ocean
Issue Date
2024
Citation
Jonathan D. Wille, et al. 2024. "The extraordinary March 2022 East Antarctica “heat” wave. Part I: observations and meteorological drivers". JOURNAL OF CLIMATE, 37(3): 757-778.
Abstract
Between March 15-19, 2022, East Antarctica experienced an exceptional heatwave with widespread 30-40° C temperature anomalies across the ice sheet. This record-shattering event saw numerous monthly temperature records being broken including a new all-time temperature record of -9.4° C on March 18 at Concordia Station despite March typically being a transition month to the Antarctic coreless winter. The driver for these temperature extremes was an intense atmospheric river advecting subtropical/mid-latitude heat and moisture deep into the Antarctic interior. The scope of the temperature records spurred a large, diverse collaborative effort to study the heatwave’s meteorological drivers, impacts, and historical climate context. Here we focus on describing those temperature records along with the intricate meteorological drivers that led to the most intense atmospheric river observed over East Antarctica. These efforts describe the Rossby wave activity forced from intense tropical convection over the Indian Ocean. This led to an atmospheric river and warm conveyor belt intensification near the coastline which reinforced atmospheric blocking deep into East Antarctica. The resulting moisture flux and upper-level warm air advection eroded the typical surface temperature inversions over the ice sheet. At the peak of the heatwave, an area of 3.3 million km2 in East Antarctica exceeded previous March monthly temperature records. Despite a temperature anomaly return time of about one hundred years, a closer recurrence of such an event is possible under future climate projections. In a subsequent manuscript, we describe the various impacts this extreme event had on the East Antarctic cryosphere.
URI
https://repository.kopri.re.kr/handle/201206/15182
DOI
http://dx.doi.org/10.1175/JCLI-D-23-0175.1
Type
Article
Station
Jang Bogo Station
Indexed
SCIE
Appears in Collections  
2023-2023, Understanding of Antarctic climate and environment and assessments of global influence (23-23) / Park, Ki-Tae (PE23030)
Files in This Item
There are no files associated with this item.

Items in DSpace are protected by copyright, with all rights reserved, unless otherwise indicated.

Browse