1. Amplified warming of North American cold extremes linked to human-induced changes in temperature variability.
- Author
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Blackport, Russell and Fyfe, John C.
- Subjects
ATMOSPHERIC circulation ,COLD (Temperature) ,TEMPERATURE distribution ,ATMOSPHERIC models ,TEMPERATURE ,WINTER - Abstract
How global warming is impacting winter cold extremes is uncertain. Previous work has found decreasing winter temperature variability over North America which suggests a reduction in frequency and intensity of cold extremes relative to mean changes. However, others argue that cold air outbreaks are becoming more likely because of Arctic-induced changes in atmospheric circulation. Here we show that cold extremes over North America have warmed substantially faster than the winter mean temperature since 1980. This amplified warming is linked to both decreasing variance and changes in higher moments of the temperature distributions. Climate model simulations with historical forcings robustly capture the observed trends in extremes and variability. A pattern-based detection and attribution analysis shows that the changes in variability are detectable in observations and can be attributed to human influence. Our results highlight that human emissions are warming North American extreme cold temperatures beyond only shifting the winter mean temperature. This study shows that the coldest winter days over North America are warming faster than the seasonal mean temperatures. These trends are robustly captured by climate models, and they are linked to human-caused temperature variability changes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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