scholarly journals Mechanisms for European summer temperature response to solar forcing over the last millennium

2012 ◽  
Vol 8 (5) ◽  
pp. 1487-1495 ◽  
Author(s):  
D. Swingedouw ◽  
L. Terray ◽  
J. Servonnat ◽  
J. Guiot

Abstract. A simulation of the last millennium is compared to a recent spatio-temporal reconstruction of summer temperature over Europe. The focus is on the response to solar forcing over the pre-industrial era. Although the correlation between solar forcing and the reconstruction remains small, the spatial regression over solar forcing shows statistically significant regions. The meridional pattern of this regression is found to be similar in the model and in the reconstruction. This pattern exhibits a large warming over Northern and Mediterranean Europe and a lesser amplitude response over Central and Eastern Europe. The mechanisms explaining this pattern in the simulation are mainly related to evapotranspiration fluxes. It is shown that the evapotranspiration is larger in summer over Central and Eastern Europe when solar forcing increases, while it decreases over the Mediterranean area. The explanation for the evapotranspiration increase over Central and Eastern Europe is found in the increase of winter precipitation there, leading to a soil moisture increase in spring. As a consequence, the evapotranspiration is larger in summer, which leads to an increase in cloud cover over this region, reducing the surface shortwave flux there and leading to less warming. Over the Mediterranean area, the surface shortwave flux increases with solar forcing, the soil becomes dryer and the evapotranspiration is reduced in summer leading to a larger increase in temperature. This effect appears to be overestimated in the model as compared to the reconstruction. Finally, the warming of Northern Europe is related to the albedo feedback due to sea-ice cover retreat with increasing solar forcing.

2012 ◽  
Vol 8 (2) ◽  
pp. 1301-1318
Author(s):  
D. Swingedouw ◽  
L. Terray ◽  
J. Servonnat ◽  
J. Guiot

Abstract. A simulation of the last millennium is compared to a recent spatio-temporal reconstruction of summer temperature over Europe. The focus is on the response to solar forcing over the pre-industrial era. Although the correlation between solar forcing and the reconstruction remains small, the spatial regression over solar forcing shows statistically significant regions. The meridional pattern of this regression is found to be similar in the model and in the reconstruction. This pattern exhibits a large warming over Northern and Mediterranean Europe and a lesser amplitude response over Central Europe. The mechanisms explaining this pattern in the simulation are mainly related to evapotranspiration fluxes. It is shown that the evapotranspiration is larger in summer over Central Europe when solar forcing increases, while it decreases over the Mediterranean area. The explanation for the evapotranspiration increase over Central Europe is found in the increase of winter precipitation there, leading to a soil moisture increase in spring. As a consequence, the evapotranspiration is larger in summer, which leads to an increase in cloud cover over this region, reducing the surface shortwave flux there and leading to less warming. Over the Mediterranean area, the surface shortwave flux increases with solar forcing, the soil becomes dryer and the evapotranspiration is reduced in summer leading to a larger increase in temperature. This effect appears to be overestimated in the model as compared to the reconstruction. Finally, the warming of Northern Europe is related to the albedo feedback due to sea-ice cover retreat with increasing solar forcing. These results show that the last millennium can be useful to evaluate the sensitivity of climate models to radiative forcing changes, using spatio-temporal reconstruction of climate.


2010 ◽  
Vol 7 (4) ◽  
pp. 5079-5097 ◽  
Author(s):  
G. Wang ◽  
A. J. Dolman ◽  
A. Alessandri

Abstract. Recent summer heat waves in Europe were preceded by precipitation deficits in winter. Numerical studies suggest that these phenomena are dynamically linked by land-atmosphere interactions. However, there is still no clear evidence that connects summer climate variability to winter precipitation and the relevant circulation pattern so far. Using a technique specially designed for detecting directional influences between climatic fields, we investigate the statistical responses of summer mean as well as maximum temperature variability (June–August, Tmean and Tmax) to preceding winter precipitation (January–March, PJFM) for the period 1901–2005. There appear distinctive Tmean and Tmax responses to PJFM over the Mediterranean, where it is most sensitive to land-atmosphere interactions. An analysis of soil moisture proxy (self-calibrating Palmer drought severity index, scPDSI) shows that the PJFM seems to influence summer temperature via soil moisture, and therefore the Tmean and Tmax responses we present here are very likely to be physical hints of water cycle interactions with temperature. We estimate that roughly 10~20% of the interannual variability of Tmax and Tmean over the Mediterranean is forced by PJFM; for the scPDSI, these values amount to 20~25%. Further analysis shows that these responses are highly correlated to the North Atlantic Oscillation (NAO) regime over the Mediterranean. Therefore we suggest that NAO modulates European summer temperature via controlling precipitation that initializes the moisture states of water cycle interactions with temperature. This clear picture of relations between European summer climate and NAO-related precipitation suggests potential for improved seasonal prediction of summer climate in particular extreme events.


Author(s):  
Tomila V. Lankina ◽  
Anneke Hudalla ◽  
Hellmut Wollmann

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