SPARC Science update: 21 April – 27 April

A selection of new science articles from the past week of interest to the SPARC community (a SPARC Office choice).

 

4Evaluation of Leading Modes of Climate Variability in the CMIP Archives. By J.T. Fasullo, A.S. Phillips, and C. Deser in the Journal of the Climate.

Eight lessons from COVID-19 to guide our climate response. By K.M. Artier in Eos.

Intercomparison of wind observations from the European Space Agency’s Aeolus satellite mission and the ALADIN Airborne Demonstrator. By O. Lux et al. in Atmospheric Measurement Techniques.

The co-evolution of technological promises, modelling, policies and climate change targets. By D. McLaren and N. Markusson in nature: climate change.

Regionally Varying Assessments of Upper-Level Tropical Width in Reanalyses and CMIP5 Models Using a Tropopause Break Metric. By E.R. Martin et al. in the Journal of the Climate.

Special issue: Advances in convection-permitting climate modelling. By A.F. Prein et al. in Climate Dynamics.

The South Asian Monsoon Circulation in Moist Isentropic Coordinates. By T.P. Sabin and O.M. Pauluis in the Journal of the Climate.

Zonally resolved water vapour coupling with tropical tropopause temperature: Seasonal and interannual variability, and influence of the Walker circulation. By K.V. Suneeth and S.S. Das in Climate Dynamics.

Earth 2020: Science, society, and sustainability in the Anthropocene. By P.D. Tortell in PNAS.

The Coupled Model Intercomparison Project: History, uses, and structural effects on climate research. By L. Touzé-Peiffer, A. Barberousse, and H. Le Treut in WIREs Climate Change.

Role of tropical variability in driving decadal shifts in the Southern Hemisphere summertime eddy-driven jet. By D. Yang et al. in the Journal of the Climate.

 

Discussion papers – open for comment:

ESD Reviews: mechanisms, evidence, and impacts of climate tipping elements. By S. Wang and Z. Hausfather in Earth System Dynamics

SPARC Science update: 14 April – 20 April

A selection of new science articles from the past week of interest to the SPARC community (a SPARC Office choice).

 

Decadal wintertime temperature changes in East Asia during 1958‐2001 and the contributions of internal variability and external forcing. By M. Luo et al. in the Journal of Geophysical Research: Atmospheres.

Dynamical and thermodynamical drivers of variability in European summer heat extremes. By L. Suarez-Gutierrez, et al. in Climate Dynamics.

Evaluation of the CAMS global atmospheric trace gas reanalysis 2003–2016 using aircraft campaign observations. By Y. Wang et al. in Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics.

 

Discussion papers – open for comment:

Global-scale distribution of ozone in the remote troposphere from ATom and HIPPO airborne field missions. By I. Bourgeois et al. in Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics.

Intra-annual variations of spectrally resolved gravity wave activity in the UMLT region. By R. Sedlak et al. in Atmospheric Measurement Techniques.

SPARC Science update: 07 April – 13 April

A selection of new science articles from the past week of interest to the SPARC community (a SPARC Office choice).

 

Spatiotemporal variability and trends in global solar radiation over Poland based on satellite‐derived data (1986–2015). By K. Kulesza in the International Journal of Climatology.

Towards an unbiased stratospheric analysis. By P. Laloyaux et al. in the Quarterly Journal of the Royal Meteorological Society.

Dehydration and low ozone in the tropopause layer over the Asian monsoon caused by tropical cyclones: Lagrangian transport calculations using ERA-Interim and ERA5 reanalysis data. By D. Li et al. in Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics.

CASEarth Poles: Big Data for the Three Poles. By X. Li et al. in the Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society.

Progress in simulating the Quasi‐biennial Oscillation in CMIP models. By J.H. Richter et al. in the Journal of Geophysical Research: Atmospheres.

Jet Latitude Regimes and the Predictability of the North Atlantic Oscillation. By K. Strommen in the the Quarterly Journal of the Royal Meteorological Society.

Can the world’s most influential climate report carry on? Nature News Q&A with Valérie Masson-Delmotte by Jeff Toffefson.

How COVID-19 could ruin weather forecasts and climate records. Nature news article by G. Viglione.

 

Discussion papers – open for comment:

Airborne measurements and large-eddy simulations of small-scale Gravity Waves at the tropopause inversion layer over Scandinavia. By S. Gisinger et al. in Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics.

SPARC Science update: 31 March – 06 April

A selection of new science articles from the past week of interest to the SPARC community (a SPARC Office choice).

 

Towards the closure of momentum budget analyses in the WRF (v3.8.1) model. By T.-C. Chen, M.-K. Yau, and D.J. Kirschbaim in Geoscientific Model Development.

Insights from Earth system model initial-condition large ensembles and future prospects. By C. Deser et al. in nature: climate change.

Can the issuance of hazardous-weather warnings inform the attribution of extreme events to climate change? By D.R. Durran in the Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society.

An endless summer: 2018 heat episodes in Europe in the context of secular temperature variability and change. By A. Hoy, S. Hänsel, and M. Maugeri in the International Journal of Climatology.

Maximum and Minimum Air Temperature Lapse Rates in the Andean region of Ecuador and Peru. By F. Navarro-Serrano et al. in the International Journal of Climatology.

Description and Evaluation of the specified-dynamics experiment in the Chemistry-Climate Model Initiative. By C. Orbe et al. in Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics.

Quantifying the radiative impact of clouds on tropopause layer cooling in tropical cyclones. By L. Ricoire et al. in the Journal of the Climate.

 

Discussion papers – open for comment:

A convolution of observational and model data to estimate age of air spectra in the northern hemispheric lower stratosphere. By M. Hauck et al. in Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics.

Impact of the eruption of Mt. Pinatubo on the chemical composition of the stratosphere. By M. Kilian, S. Brinkop and P. Jöckel in Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics.

Announcement: SPARC Gravity Wave Symposium

Find meeting webpage

We cordially invite you to save the dates on your calendar for the 2021 SPARC Gravity Wave Symposium now scheduled to be the week of 27 September—1 October 2021 starting on the morning of September 27th and departing after lunch Friday October 1st on the Westend (downtown) campus of the Goethe University Frankfurt in Frankfurt/Main, Germany: https://www.goethe-university-frankfurt.de

This SPARC symposium is a continuation of a series of successful similar GW meetings lead-organized by Kevin Hamilton, Joan Alexander, Kaoru Sato, Fuqing Zhang and others over the past couple of decades. The tentative title of the next year’s symposium will be “Atmospheric gravity waves: towards a next-generation representation in weather and climate models”. Research on all aspects of atmospheric gravity waves, including newly emerging topics, will be welcomed but some particular emphases will be given to measurements, simulations, and numerical and theoretical developments, especially those confronting, challenging, and advancing the present-day treatment of gravity waves in atmospheric models.

Further logistics will be forthcoming but at this point we would like you to save the dates, and also please preregister on the web site below which will guide us in negotiating how many rooms and seats are needed for the symposium. We understand at this point your response will not be binding. The web-site address is:

https://express.converia.de/frontend/index.php?sub=529

Please also feel free to forward this announcement to whoever might be interested. Your help in this regard would be appreciated. We also apologize for the case you are receiving the announcement several times.

Co-conveners: Ulrich Achatz, Joan Alexander, and Kaoru Sato
Meeting secretary: Aurelia Müller

We look forward to your participation.

Best regards, and stay healthy,

Ulrich, Joan, and Kaoru