2020
DOI: 10.1029/2020gl087907
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Jet Speed Variability Obscures Euro‐Atlantic Regime Structure

Abstract: Euro‐Atlantic regimes are typically identified using either the latitude of the North Atlantic jet or clustering algorithms in the phase space of 500‐hPa geopotential (Z500). However, while robust trimodality is visibly apparent in jet latitude indices, Z500 clusters require highly sensitive significance tests to distinguish them from autocorrelated noise. This leads to considerable decadal variability in regime patterns, confounding many potential applications. A clear‐cut choice of the optimal number of regi… Show more

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Cited by 21 publications
(29 citation statements)
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“…While the failure to detect the Southern jet mode should probably be viewed as a shortcoming, we would also suggest that this failure may shed some light on a few curious features in the literature. Firstly, many studies have tried to diagnose regimes in the Euro-Atlantic sector, and, depending on the choice of input data, pre-processing steps and diagnostics, these studies have suggested there may be anywhere between 2 and 6 regimes (see [66], [22], [48], [50] and [19] respectively for examples of each number). While the ambiguity between the choices 3, 4 and 5 is at least in part due to the confounding influence of the jet speed [22], and the choice of 2 regimes usually corresponds to the North Atlantic Oscillation dipole [67,66], the striking divergence in the number of regimes across studies using similar techniques is still somewhat puzzling.…”
Section: Strengths and Weaknesses Of Our Methodologymentioning
confidence: 99%
See 3 more Smart Citations
“…While the failure to detect the Southern jet mode should probably be viewed as a shortcoming, we would also suggest that this failure may shed some light on a few curious features in the literature. Firstly, many studies have tried to diagnose regimes in the Euro-Atlantic sector, and, depending on the choice of input data, pre-processing steps and diagnostics, these studies have suggested there may be anywhere between 2 and 6 regimes (see [66], [22], [48], [50] and [19] respectively for examples of each number). While the ambiguity between the choices 3, 4 and 5 is at least in part due to the confounding influence of the jet speed [22], and the choice of 2 regimes usually corresponds to the North Atlantic Oscillation dipole [67,66], the striking divergence in the number of regimes across studies using similar techniques is still somewhat puzzling.…”
Section: Strengths and Weaknesses Of Our Methodologymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Firstly, many studies have tried to diagnose regimes in the Euro-Atlantic sector, and, depending on the choice of input data, pre-processing steps and diagnostics, these studies have suggested there may be anywhere between 2 and 6 regimes (see [66], [22], [48], [50] and [19] respectively for examples of each number). While the ambiguity between the choices 3, 4 and 5 is at least in part due to the confounding influence of the jet speed [22], and the choice of 2 regimes usually corresponds to the North Atlantic Oscillation dipole [67,66], the striking divergence in the number of regimes across studies using similar techniques is still somewhat puzzling. Our results suggest that one possible reason for this is that,…”
Section: Strengths and Weaknesses Of Our Methodologymentioning
confidence: 99%
See 2 more Smart Citations
“…Cluster analysis applied to SLP or geopotential height is commonly used to classify circulation patterns into so-called weather regimes. In the North Atlantic during winter, four classical regimes are identified (e.g Cassou, 2008;Michelangeli et al, 1995;Vautard, 1990), although the optimal number of clusters is not clear-cut and depends somewhat on the algorithm, atmospheric field, domain, and considered temporal period (Christiansen, 2007;Dorrington and Strommen, 2020;Falkena et al, 2020;Woollings et al, 2010). Madonna et al (2017) showed that applying a cluster analysis to the low-level jet leads to four jet configurations that correspond to the four classical weather regimes in the Euro-Atlantic sector: the northern jet resembles the Atlantic Ridge regime, the central jet resembles the zonal/NAO+ regime, the mixed jet resembles the Scandinavian blocking regime, and the southern jet resembles the Greenland anticyclone/NAO− regime (see Fig.…”
Section: Jet Clustersmentioning
confidence: 99%