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AGU: Journal of Geophysical Research, Space Physics

 

Keywords

  • geomagnetic activity
  • troposphere
  • climate variability

Index Terms

  • Global Change: Climate variability
  • Ionosphere: Ionosphere/atmosphere interactions
  • Ionosphere: Particle precipitation
  • Atmospheric Processes: Polar meteorology
  • Atmospheric Processes: Stratosphere/troposphere interactions
Abstract
Cited By (11)
 

Abstract

JOURNAL OF GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH, VOL. 114, A10312, 10 PP., 2009
doi:10.1029/2008JA014029

Geomagnetic activity and polar surface air temperature variability

A. Seppälä

Physical Sciences Division, British Antarctic Survey (NERC), Cambridge, UK

C. E. Randall

Laboratory for Atmospheric and Space Physics and Department of Atmospheric and Oceanic Sciences, University of Colorado, Boulder, Colorado, USA

M. A. Clilverd

Physical Sciences Division, British Antarctic Survey (NERC), Cambridge, UK

E. Rozanov

Physical-Meteorological Observatory/World Radiation Center, Davos, Switzerland

C. J. Rodger

Institute for Atmospheric and Climate Science, Eidgenoössische Technische Hochschule, Zurich, Switzerland

Here we use the ERA-40 and ECMWF operational surface level air temperature data sets from 1957 to 2006 to examine polar temperature variations during years with different levels of geomagnetic activity, as defined by the A p index. Previous modeling work has suggested that NO x produced at high latitudes by energetic particle precipitation can eventually lead to detectable changes in surface air temperatures (SATs). We find that during winter months, polar SATs in years with high A p index are different than in years with low A p index; the differences are statistically significant at the 2-sigma level and range up to about ±4.5 K, depending on location. The temperature differences are larger when years with wintertime Sudden Stratospheric Warmings (SSWs) are excluded. We take into account solar irradiance variations, unlike previous analyses of geomagnetic effects in ERA-40 and operational data. Although we cannot conclusively show that the polar SAT patterns are physically linked by geomagnetic activity, we conclude that geomagnetic activity likely plays a role in modulating wintertime surface air temperatures. We tested our SAT results against variation in the Quasi Biennial Oscillation, the El Niño Southern Oscillation and the Southern Annular Mode. The results suggested that these were not driving the observed polar SAT variability. However, significant uncertainty is introduced by the Northern Annular Mode, and we cannot robustly exclude a chance linkage between sea surface temperature variability and geomagnetic activity.

Received 29 December 2008; accepted 14 August 2009; published 21 October 2009.

Citation: Seppälä, A., C. E. Randall, M. A. Clilverd, E. Rozanov, and C. J. Rodger (2009), Geomagnetic activity and polar surface air temperature variability, J. Geophys. Res., 114, A10312, doi:10.1029/2008JA014029.

Cited By

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