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  3. Advancing Our Understanding of Eddy-driven Jet Stream Responses to Climate Change – A Roadmap
 

Advancing Our Understanding of Eddy-driven Jet Stream Responses to Climate Change – A Roadmap

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Description
Extratropical jets and associated storm tracks significantly influence weather and regional climate across various timescales. Understanding jet responses to climate change is essential for reliable regional climate projections. This review serves two main purposes: (1) to provide an accessible overview of extratropical jet dynamics and a comprehensive examination of current challenges and uncertainties in predicting jet responses to greenhouse gas increases and (2) to suggest innovative experiments to advance our understanding of these responses.
BORIS DOI
10.48620/88010
Date of Publication
2025
Publication Type
Article
Division/Institute

Oeschger Centre for C...

Oeschger Centre for C...

Universitat de Barcel...

Finnish Meteorologica...

University of Bergen

Geographisches Instit...

University of Reading...

University of Vienna

Institute of Atmosphe...

Author
Ossó, Albert
Bladé, Ileana
Universitat de Barcelona
Karpechko, Alexey
Finnish Meteorological Institute
Li, Camille
University of Bergen
Maraun, Douglas
Romppainen-Martius, Oliviaorcid-logo
Geographisches Institut (GIUB) - Klimafolgenforschung
Oeschger Centre for Climate Change Research (OCCR) - MobiLab
Shaffrey, Len
University of Reading
Voigt, Aiko
University of Vienna
Woollings, Tim
Zappa, Giuseppe
Institute of Atmospheric Sciences and Climate
Subject(s)

000 - Computer scienc...

500 - Science

900 - History::910 - ...

Series
Current Climate Change Reports
ISSN or ISBN (if monograph)
2198-6061
Publisher
Springer
Language
English
Publisher DOI
10.1007/s40641-024-00199-3
Uncontrolled Keywords

Jet stream

Climate change

Climate projections

Regional climate proj...

Projection uncertaint...

Sensitivity experimen...

Description
Extratropical jets and associated storm tracks significantly influence weather and regional climate across various timescales. Understanding jet responses to climate change is essential for reliable regional climate projections. This review serves two main purposes: (1) to provide an accessible overview of extratropical jet dynamics and a comprehensive examination of current challenges and uncertainties in predicting jet responses to greenhouse gas increases and (2) to suggest innovative experiments to advance our understanding of these responses.
While successive generations of climate model ensembles consistently project a mean poleward shift of the midlatitude zonal-mean maximum winds, there remains considerable intermodel spread and large uncertainty across seasonal and regional jet responses. Of particular note is our limited understanding of how these jets respond to the intricate interplay of multiple concurrent drivers, such as the strong warming in polar and tropical regions, and the relative importance of each factor. Furthermore, the difficulty of simulating processes requiring high resolution, such as those linked to sharp sea surface temperature gradients or diabatic effects related to tropical convection and extratropical cyclones, has historically hindered progress.
We advocate for a collaborative effort to enhance our understanding of the jet stream response to climate change. We propose a series of new experiments that take advantage of recent advances in computing power and modelling capabilities to better resolve small-scale processes such as convective circulations, which we consider essential for a good representation of jet dynamics.
Handle
https://boris-portal.unibe.ch/handle/20.500.12422/210939
Funding(s)
Universität Graz
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s40641-024-00199-3.pdftextAdobe PDF2.36 MBAttribution (CC BY 4.0)publishedOpen
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