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The semi-annual oscillation and Antarctic climate. Part 1: influence on near surface temperatures (1957–79)

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  07 May 2004

Michiel R. Van Den Broeke
Affiliation:
Norwegian Polar Institute, PO Box 5072 Majorstua, N-0301 Oslo, Norway IMAU (Institute for Marine and Atmospheric Research), PO Box 80.005, 3508TA Utrecht, Netherlands, E-mail: broeke@fys.ruu.nl
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Abstract

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We studied the influence of the semi-annual oscillation (SAO) on near-surface temperatures in Antarctica, using observations of 27 stations that were operational during (part of) the period 1957–79. For the annual cycle of surface pressure, the second harmonic explains 17–36% of the total variance on the Antarctic Plateau, 36–68% along the East Antarctic coast and almost 80% on the west coast of the Peninsula, and decreases further to the north. As a result of the amplification of the wave-3 structure of the circulation around Antarctica, a significant modification of the seasonal cooling is observed at many stations. The magnitude of this modification is largely determined by the strength of the temperature inversion at the surface: the percentage of the variance explained by the second harmonic of the annual temperature cycle is then largest on the Antarctic Plateau (11–18%), followed by the large ice shelves and coastal East Antarctica (6–12%) and stations at or close to the Peninsula (0–5%). A significant coupling between the half-yearly wave in surface pressure and that in surface temperature is found for coastal East Antarctica, which can be directly explained by the changes in meridional circulation brought about by the SAO. We show that the coupling of Antarctic temperatures to the meridional circulation is not only valid on the seasonal time scale of the SAO, but probably also on daily and interannual time scales. This has important implications for the interpretation of time series of Antarctic temperatures, a problem that will be addressed in part 2 of this paper.

Type
Papers—Atmospheric Sciences
Copyright
© Antarctic Science Ltd 1998