A detailed analysis of the spatial and temporal changes in mean seasonal and annual surface air temperatures over the period of instrumental observations in the Arctic is presented. In addition, the role of atmospheric circulation in controlling the instrumental and decadal-scale changes of air temp
Spatial and Temporal Changes in Extreme Air Temperatures in the Arctic Over the Period 1951–1990
✍ Scribed by PRZYBYLAK, RAJMUND
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 1997
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 848 KB
- Volume
- 17
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0899-8418
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
✦ Synopsis
A detailed analysis of the spatial and temporal changes in mean seasonal and annual daily maximum (T max ) and minimum (T min ) air temperatures and diurnal temperature range (DTR) in the Arctic over the period is presented. This analysis is preceded by a description of the spatial distributions of the mean seasonal and annual 40-year extreme temperatures (i.e. T max and T min ).
The rate of decrease of the mean Arctic T min is about twice as weak as the rate for T max in the period 1951-1990. As a result, a decrease in DTR is observed. Not all areas of the Arctic, however, show such tendency, e.g. large parts of the Canadian Arctic do not. The increases in DTR here are more common in summer than in winter.
The decrease in DTR is related partly to increases in cloud cover, especially in the warm half-year when solar radiation is present in the Arctic. On the contrary, in the cool half-year (mainly during polar night) the day-to-day changes of temperature, governed at this time by very variable atmospheric circulation, have a greater impact than the cloudiness.
The increase in variability of T max and T min has not occurred in the most recent decades.
No evidence of any greenhouse warming in the Arctic over the period 1951-1990 is seen. Most of the T max and T min trends are not statistically significant.
📜 SIMILAR VOLUMES
## Abstract A detailed analysis of intraseasonal (within season) and interannual (between years) temperature variability for the whole Arctic for the period 1951–90 is provided. For this purpose four temperature variables were used: average (TMEAN), maximum (TMAX) and minimum (TMIN) temperatures, a
## Abstract Analyses of extreme flooding in Austria is performed using daily discharge time series from 27 stations over the period 1951‐2006. The main research questions revolve around: (1) temporal non‐stationarities in the flood record, (2) upper tail and scaling properties of the flood peak rec
This article presents a detailed account of air temperature (using four thermal parameters: mean daily air temperature (MDAT), maximum daily temperature (TMAX), minimum daily temperature (TMIN), and diurnal temperature range (DTR)) in the Canadian Arctic from 1819 to 1859. As source data, the author
## Abstract An analysis of trends of mean monthly temperature and precipitation totals in Poland in the period 1951–2000 was carried out. Areal means of temperature and precipitation were used, averaged for 51 meteorological stations evenly distributed within Poland's borders. Sensitivity of air te
## Abstract Century‐long precipitation records from stations in the contiguous USA indicate an increased frequency of rainy days over the past century and some evolution in the probability distributions of precipitation amount. Temporal trends in eight metrics of the precipitation climate are of si