How are atmospheric blockings represented in a dry general circulation model with wave energy just as powerful as in the observations? 

crossref(2023)

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摘要
<p>Atmospheric blocking can be described as a large-scale stationary or quasi-stationary circulation anomaly that blocks the mean westerlies. Blocking often triggers extreme temperature events like heat waves or cold spells. However, dynamical processes leading to the formation, maintenance, and decay mechanisms of blocking are still not well understood.</p> <p>Moist processes have recently been proven to play a significant role in the formation and maintenance of blocking. However, it is unclear if moist processes generate special properties in the blocking life cycle that cannot be represented by dry dynamics or if they are just there to inject extra energy into the atmospheric disturbances. The following is the question we address in the present study: Is a dry dynamical model with climatology close to the observations capable of representing blocking characteristics correctly? The methodology relies on numerical experiments made with the new IPSL dynamical core called DYNAMICO, which enables high spatial resolutions. DYNAMICO is used here to analyze a long-term simulation in which the model forcing is designed to obtain a realistic climatology for a given season (perpetual winter in the present case). Blocking statistics like frequency of occurrence and duration are provided using two blocking detection algorithms and compared to the re-analysis dataset (ERA5). A focus is made on blocking onsets in the Euro-Atlantic sector. To highlight the differences in the processes leading to blocking onsets, backward Lagrangian trajectories seeded in the blocking regions are systematically computed and analyzed. Additional long-term simulations of the same dry model with the increased horizontal resolution are also analyzed following the same approach.</p>
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