Summer heat waves in southeastern Patagonia: An analysis of the intraseasonal timescale

We explore the occurrence of intraseasonal summer heat waves in southeastern Patagonia (SEPG, 46°-52°S; 65°-70°W) since the late 19th century by means of the Twentieth Century Reanalysis version 2 (20CRv2). In total, we identify 201 cases for 1872-2010 using criteria of intensity and persistence. In...

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Autores principales: Jacques-Coper, M., Brönnimann, S., Martius, O., Vera, C., Cerne, B.
Formato: JOUR
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Acceso en línea:http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12110/paper_08998418_v36_n3_p1359_JacquesCoper
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spelling todo:paper_08998418_v36_n3_p1359_JacquesCoper2023-10-03T15:44:25Z Summer heat waves in southeastern Patagonia: An analysis of the intraseasonal timescale Jacques-Coper, M. Brönnimann, S. Martius, O. Vera, C. Cerne, B. Heat waves Intraseasonal variability Oceania Patagonia South America Temperature Warm season Climate change Temperature Heat waves Intraseasonal variability Oceania Patagonia South America Warm seasons Climatology air temperature atmospheric circulation extreme event nineteenth century regional climate seasonal variation summer teleconnection timescale twentieth century warming Australia New Zealand Pacific Ocean Pacific Ocean (South) Patagonia Tasman Sea We explore the occurrence of intraseasonal summer heat waves in southeastern Patagonia (SEPG, 46°-52°S; 65°-70°W) since the late 19th century by means of the Twentieth Century Reanalysis version 2 (20CRv2). In total, we identify 201 cases for 1872-2010 using criteria of intensity and persistence. In SEPG, the corresponding intraseasonal temperature signals are centred around the first day of each cluster of days fulfilling those conditions (named day 0). The mean warm deviation lasts for approximately 2weeks and exhibits a mean temperature peak of 4.3°C on day 0 (the warmest day in the mean signal). In a regional context, the mean temperature perturbation associated with these heat waves affects a broad area on both sides of the Andes. The warming in SEPG is caused by temperature advection and enhanced radiative heating, following a high pressure system over southern South America (SSA). This atmospheric perturbation is embedded in a wave-train-like pattern along the South Pacific. As part of this pattern, a cyclonic anomaly progresses eastward over the Tasman Sea in Oceania, moving from southeastern Australia (day -6, causing a dry anomaly there) over New Zealand (day -3, inducing a wet anomaly on its Southern Island). The anomalous circulation triggered by the wave train leads thus to a teleconnection between SSA and Oceania, documented in a previous work for the interannual scale. Two thirds of the heat wave events are linked to enhanced ascent in the South Atlantic Convergence Zone (SACZ) and around one third of the events within 1957-2010 are associated with extreme absolute maximum temperatures observed at a station-based record from SEPG. Finally, possible spatial modulations of the wave train pattern at the interannual and interdecadal timescales are discussed. © 2016 Royal Meteorological Society. Fil:Vera, C. Universidad de Buenos Aires. Facultad de Ciencias Exactas y Naturales; Argentina. Fil:Cerne, B. Universidad de Buenos Aires. Facultad de Ciencias Exactas y Naturales; Argentina. JOUR info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.5/ar http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12110/paper_08998418_v36_n3_p1359_JacquesCoper
institution Universidad de Buenos Aires
institution_str I-28
repository_str R-134
collection Biblioteca Digital - Facultad de Ciencias Exactas y Naturales (UBA)
topic Heat waves
Intraseasonal variability
Oceania
Patagonia
South America
Temperature
Warm season
Climate change
Temperature
Heat waves
Intraseasonal variability
Oceania
Patagonia
South America
Warm seasons
Climatology
air temperature
atmospheric circulation
extreme event
nineteenth century
regional climate
seasonal variation
summer
teleconnection
timescale
twentieth century
warming
Australia
New Zealand
Pacific Ocean
Pacific Ocean (South)
Patagonia
Tasman Sea
spellingShingle Heat waves
Intraseasonal variability
Oceania
Patagonia
South America
Temperature
Warm season
Climate change
Temperature
Heat waves
Intraseasonal variability
Oceania
Patagonia
South America
Warm seasons
Climatology
air temperature
atmospheric circulation
extreme event
nineteenth century
regional climate
seasonal variation
summer
teleconnection
timescale
twentieth century
warming
Australia
New Zealand
Pacific Ocean
Pacific Ocean (South)
Patagonia
Tasman Sea
Jacques-Coper, M.
Brönnimann, S.
Martius, O.
Vera, C.
Cerne, B.
Summer heat waves in southeastern Patagonia: An analysis of the intraseasonal timescale
topic_facet Heat waves
Intraseasonal variability
Oceania
Patagonia
South America
Temperature
Warm season
Climate change
Temperature
Heat waves
Intraseasonal variability
Oceania
Patagonia
South America
Warm seasons
Climatology
air temperature
atmospheric circulation
extreme event
nineteenth century
regional climate
seasonal variation
summer
teleconnection
timescale
twentieth century
warming
Australia
New Zealand
Pacific Ocean
Pacific Ocean (South)
Patagonia
Tasman Sea
description We explore the occurrence of intraseasonal summer heat waves in southeastern Patagonia (SEPG, 46°-52°S; 65°-70°W) since the late 19th century by means of the Twentieth Century Reanalysis version 2 (20CRv2). In total, we identify 201 cases for 1872-2010 using criteria of intensity and persistence. In SEPG, the corresponding intraseasonal temperature signals are centred around the first day of each cluster of days fulfilling those conditions (named day 0). The mean warm deviation lasts for approximately 2weeks and exhibits a mean temperature peak of 4.3°C on day 0 (the warmest day in the mean signal). In a regional context, the mean temperature perturbation associated with these heat waves affects a broad area on both sides of the Andes. The warming in SEPG is caused by temperature advection and enhanced radiative heating, following a high pressure system over southern South America (SSA). This atmospheric perturbation is embedded in a wave-train-like pattern along the South Pacific. As part of this pattern, a cyclonic anomaly progresses eastward over the Tasman Sea in Oceania, moving from southeastern Australia (day -6, causing a dry anomaly there) over New Zealand (day -3, inducing a wet anomaly on its Southern Island). The anomalous circulation triggered by the wave train leads thus to a teleconnection between SSA and Oceania, documented in a previous work for the interannual scale. Two thirds of the heat wave events are linked to enhanced ascent in the South Atlantic Convergence Zone (SACZ) and around one third of the events within 1957-2010 are associated with extreme absolute maximum temperatures observed at a station-based record from SEPG. Finally, possible spatial modulations of the wave train pattern at the interannual and interdecadal timescales are discussed. © 2016 Royal Meteorological Society.
format JOUR
author Jacques-Coper, M.
Brönnimann, S.
Martius, O.
Vera, C.
Cerne, B.
author_facet Jacques-Coper, M.
Brönnimann, S.
Martius, O.
Vera, C.
Cerne, B.
author_sort Jacques-Coper, M.
title Summer heat waves in southeastern Patagonia: An analysis of the intraseasonal timescale
title_short Summer heat waves in southeastern Patagonia: An analysis of the intraseasonal timescale
title_full Summer heat waves in southeastern Patagonia: An analysis of the intraseasonal timescale
title_fullStr Summer heat waves in southeastern Patagonia: An analysis of the intraseasonal timescale
title_full_unstemmed Summer heat waves in southeastern Patagonia: An analysis of the intraseasonal timescale
title_sort summer heat waves in southeastern patagonia: an analysis of the intraseasonal timescale
url http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12110/paper_08998418_v36_n3_p1359_JacquesCoper
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