Planetary and Gravity Waves as Drivers of Sudden Stratospheric Warmings (PEGASUS)

Lead Research Organisation: University of Bath
Department Name: Electronic and Electrical Engineering

Abstract

Sudden stratospheric warmings (SSWs) are some of the most dramatic events in the entire atmosphere. Over just a few days, the high-altitude jet stream stops and sometimes even reverses, and polar stratospheric temperatures can shoot up as much as 50 degrees Celsius. Their effects propagate upwards, where they modulate the near-Earth space environment of the ionosphere, and downwards, where they can cause extreme winter weather in densely-populated regions such as Europe and North America.

SSWs occur on average twice every three winters, but may occur several times in one winter and then not at all for several years afterwards. Forecasting them more than a few days in advance is extremely challenging. Their effects are also very difficult to predict - while (for example) the 'Beast From The East' of February 2018 in Europe and the 'Polar Vortex Winter' of January 2014 in the eastern United States were directly attributable to SSWs which happened a few days earlier, many SSWs have occurred with almost no effect on surface weather.

In PEGASUS, we will use new satellite measurement techniques and advanced computer models to better understand the physics of how SSWs develop, and of how and why they affect both surface weather and space weather. We will (i) test a recent theory that changes our understanding of how and why SSWs happen, (ii) investigate the details of how, when and where SSWs affect surface weather and (iii) measure the effects of SSWs on the global upper atmosphere, with implications for GPS and radio communications.

(i) Traditionally, we thought that SSWs were triggered by extremely large and unusually intense 'planetary waves' travelling through the atmosphere. These large waves seriously disrupt the jet stream, making it collapse and triggering an SSW. However, recent work has shown that this conceptual model does not properly explain the observed SSW record. Instead, a new theory challenges this model at a fundamental level. This new theory is that smaller-scale 'gravity waves' over the weeks before the SSW nudge the jet stream into a less robust state, weak enough that normal winter weather can be enough to trigger the start of an SSW. The precise distribution of these gravity waves, in space, time and intensity, may also affect how severe the surface effects of the SSW are. There is thus an important need to test this new theory. PEGASUS will do so. We will use advanced new satellite methods of measuring both the large planetary waves and the much smaller gravity waves to study the development of every SSW in the last sixteen years. We will also study idealised mathematical models (i.e. models which strip away unnecessary details) to understand the underlying physics and mathematics of how SSWs evolve and develop. This will provide a robust and critical test of the new theory.

(ii) This combination of observational and theoretical insight will let us test and assess how well forty leading climate models reproduce SSWs. We will use this information to select the best such models, tested against both observations and theory from (i). We will then study these selected models in close detail to understand what features of SSWs cause them to affect the surface and the upper atmosphere, with the aim of better predicting both SSW development and surface effects in future. In particular, we will closely study the differences between the surface effects of two different types of SSW, known as 'splits' and 'displacements' based on how they affect the jet stream.

(iii) Finally, we will quantify how SSWs affect global GPS signals and radio communications, allowing us to understand not just the surface weather effects of SSWs but also their space-weather effects. This will use a chain of five state-of-the-art radars spanning from pole-to-pole, and global measurements of upper-atmospheric composition from satellite measurements.

Planned Impact

SSWs are major stratospheric weather events, which have knock-on effects throughout the atmosphere above and below them, from the Earth's surface to the edge of space.

At the surface, SSWs are an important driver of unusually extreme winter weather at surface level, especially the densely-populated regions of Europe and North America. Such weather has a major and direct impact on a vast range of industries, from logistics and transport to hospitality, oil and gas supply and public service. It also has broad implications for human health and mortality both during and after the events. PEGASUS will improve our scientific knowledge of how and why SSWs occur, facilitating advances in forecasting both when they happen and, when they do occur, how they will affect the surface.

Furthermore, a range of recent studies (e.g Sigmond et al, Nat. Geosci. 2013; Tripathi et al, Environ. Res. Lett 2015) have suggested that our limited ability to predict SSWs is a key roadblock on the path to producing meaningful weather forecasts at sub-seasonal and seasonal timescales, i.e. timescales of roughly a month or longer. Our work will directly address this block on the pathway to this highly challenging goal, with broad implications on long-term planning in industries such as farming and civil engineering.

Publications

10 25 50
 
Description Significant media interest in Hall et al (2021), including articles from ABC, the Daily Mail, the Express, the Independent, Metro, Newsweek, and Russia Today. Significant impact in Wright et al (2022), including articles in over 70 media sources, including CNet, Eos, The Independent, Nature, and The New York Times, and radio/TV including BBC Points West and The World Press release by European Space Agency focusing on work carried out by Wright using ESA-Aeolus data to study sudden stratospheric warmings.
First Year Of Impact 2021
Sector Environment,Other
Impact Types Cultural

 
Description URF Renewal
Amount £793,000 (GBP)
Funding ID URF\R\221023 
Organisation The Royal Society 
Sector Charity/Non Profit
Country United Kingdom
Start 10/2022 
End 09/2025
 
Description Collaboration on spectral analysis with Joan Alexander and Laura Holt 
Organisation Northwest Research Associates
Country United States 
Sector Public 
PI Contribution We provided the software techniques and wrote the resulting paper.
Collaborator Contribution They provided the underlying concepts and an environment free of distraction to do the work.
Impact New spectral analysis ("the 2D+1 S-Transform") that we have used in several studies since it provides improved vertical discrimination.
Start Year 2019
 
Description Collaboration on sudden stratospheric warmings as driven by gravity waves with Dr Ales Kuchar, University of Leipzig 
Organisation University of Leipzig
Country Germany 
Sector Academic/University 
PI Contribution We provided the gravity wave data for comparison.
Collaborator Contribution They provided the vortex edge data for the comparison.
Impact Paper in prep.
Start Year 2022