USU study links polar vortex to climate change

mentalfloss

Prickly Curmudgeon Smiter
Jun 28, 2010
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USU study links California drought, polar vortex to climate change

A Utah State University study has found a link between climate change and two of the biggest extreme weather events that have played out in the first half of the year — the California drought and the polar vortex.

The new study blames an unusual “dipole,” a combination of a strong Western high pressure ridge and a deep Great Lakes low pressure trough. That dipole is linked to a recently found precursor to El Nino, the weather-changing phenomenon. And that precursor itself seems amplified by a buildup of heat-trapping greenhouse gases, the study says.

The author of the study, Simon Wang, saw the precursors and weather event coming months before federal weather officials issued an official El Nino watch last month.

Wang is assistant director of the Utah Climate Center — a state research facility based at USU — and worked with other professors on the study, which is set to be published in Geophysical Research Letters.

“I believe we have uncovered another important piece to link to extreme events in North America,” said Wang in an interview on Wednesday. “The first thing (people should know) is to prepare better next time a similar event hits because this 'dipole' is increasingly likely to happen again with greater intensity. ... This extreme event is not really random and is potentially traceable/predictable, and the pathway from which human-induced warming affects individual climate extreme events (is) complex but identifiable.”

The study’s findings can better help water managers and energy suppliers plan for the future, Wang said.

Below-average rainfall has put the entire Golden State in drought, ranging from moderate to exceptional for the first time in 15 years, according to the Los Angeles Times. The polar vortex — which occurred at the beginning of the year — was a powerful high pressure system originating in the Eastern Pacific stretching to the North Pole, shoving the vortex farther south than is typical, allowing it to settle in Canada and the U.S.

“We are always going after extreme events — meaning the cause of it and the impact of it, and more importantly, how we can predict them,” Wang said of the reasoning behind the new study. “With this California drought, nobody saw it coming, so we only knew there was drought in California after it has happened. How can we overcome this? How can we find a clue to foresee its occurrence — that’s really the motivation.”

Wang added that the work from the study is not done, with more to come on applications for the research.

Last year, Wang and the Utah Climate Center’s director, Robert Gillies, came up with a model to better predict the inversions that occur during Cache Valley winters.

Wang said the Utah Climate Center is also employing this new study’s findings to look for future groundwater resources in Utah.

“We have a very good ability to predict up to 2050 or end of century how our groundwater will become regardless of human use, just the natural process,” he said. “We found that groundwater resources will decline if you put greenhouse gases in the atmosphere.”

http://m.idahostatejournal.com/outd...285-a03b-566d-a191-df08d0a2bd25.html?mode=jqm
 

mentalfloss

Prickly Curmudgeon Smiter
Jun 28, 2010
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From your own link:

They are not well studied and seldom destructive as they typically take place in sparsely populated areas.
 

petros

The Central Scrutinizer
Nov 21, 2008
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From your own link:

They are not well studied and seldom destructive as they typically take place in sparsely populated areas.

Riiiiight and aren't new. Would you consider AB, SK and MB sparsely populated with 5 million?

757,200sq miles.....
 
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EagleSmack

Hall of Fame Member
Feb 16, 2005
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Keep discrediting your own premise.

It's fun to watch.

 

Locutus

Adorable Deplorable
Jun 18, 2007
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I think professor wank was working with the 'humans will be extinct in 100 years' bonehead too.
 

MHz

Time Out
Mar 16, 2007
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Red Deer AB
The Japan disaster will have us wishing for permanent wind from the north, frost is easier to deal with than hot particles.