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REGIONAL & GLOBAL SCALE PATTERNS ASSOCIATED WITH RAINFALL ANOMALIES IN ISRAEL

REGIONAL & GLOBAL SCALE PATTERNS ASSOCIATED WITH RAINFALL ANOMALIES IN ISRAEL. Baruch Ziv Uri Dayan Chaggi Rot Yohanan Kushnir Yehouda Enzel Ziv et al (2006) Regional and Global Atmospheric Patterns Governing Rainfall in the Southern Levant , Int. J. Clim., 26. MOTIVATION.

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REGIONAL & GLOBAL SCALE PATTERNS ASSOCIATED WITH RAINFALL ANOMALIES IN ISRAEL

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  1. REGIONAL & GLOBAL SCALE PATTERNS ASSOCIATED WITH RAINFALL ANOMALIES IN ISRAEL Baruch ZivUri DayanChaggi Rot Yohanan Kushnir Yehouda Enzel Ziv et al (2006) Regional and Global Atmospheric Patterns Governing Rainfall in the Southern Levant, Int. J. Clim.,26

  2. MOTIVATION • The sensitivity of the region to water shortage • The linkage of the rainfall to single synoptic system facilitates the analysis Enzel et al. (2003) showed that the Dead-Sea level responds to Israel rainfall. Therefore: • If tele-connection is found between Israel rainfall and the conditions in other regions, the Dead Sea level can serve as proxy for past climate variations for these regions

  3. The study area and the rain stations used Mediterranean Sea Dead Sea Average annual rainfall 12 stations with continuous record were selected 2/3 of the annual rainfall is obtained in DJF Therefore, each season is represented by DJF rainfall Study period: 1950-2002

  4. Most of the rainfall results from Cyprus Lows Their signature appears in the Long-Term Mean SLP

  5. 500 hPa SLP Cyprus Low is most pronounced in composite maps for days with ~50 mm in Israel The low is accompanied by pronounced upper-trough Dates

  6. Seasonal Signature: composite SLP maps 10 driest years – Cyprus Low is hardly discerned 10 wettest years – Cyprus Low dominates Difference(wettest-driest) Main Feature: WE-EM dipole

  7. 10 driest years – Main trough at Central Med 10 wettest years – Main trough at East-Med Composite 500-hPa gph Difference(wettest-driest) Main Feature: WE-EM dipole

  8. SLP 700 mb temp 500 mb gph Correlation maps of Israel rainfall (DJF) with: Main Feature: WE-EM dipole!

  9. Similar dipole in the upper-level The SLP resembles the AO The correlation patterns resemble the “Mediterranean Oscillation” (Dunkeloh and Jacobeit, 2003) Associated rainfall anomaly: negative over the MG, except for the SE Med

  10. Correlation with known global circulation Kutiel&Benaroch Price et al. Ben Gai, Eshel The E coast of Med’s rainfall is not determined by NAO

  11. Correlation with 925 hPa temperature Prominent remote feature: Pacific Warm Pool -0.6 -0.4 -0.4

  12. Band-anomalies along polar stratospheric jets in both N & S hemispheres Global 50 hPa zonal-wind correlation with Israel DJF rainfall

  13. The stratospheric anomalies at both sub-polar regions are prominent Height-latitude correlation cross-section of zonally averaged zonal wind with Israel DJF rainfall

  14. Correlations farther from Israel are weaker, but remote distinct patterns are discerned: • North and South stratospheric polar jets • SST over the tropical & subtropical W Pacific Suspecting that direct relationships between them and Israel exist, we searched for an indirect, through the W-Europe-E-Med dipole We constructed a time series for each factor and derived 500 hPa gph correlation map, searching for a fingerprint of the WE-EM dipole

  15. N Polar Jet Pacific Warm Pool S Polar Jet In all of them the WE-EM dipole appears 500 hPa gph Correlation maps for DJF with

  16. Explanations for the indirect tele-connections N Polar Jet Graf et al. (1994) found this relationship, suggested that this wave is enhanced by the increase in stratospheric reflectivity when the jet intensifies Indo-Pacific Warm Pool Increase in SST at certain region along the ITCZ enhances the Hadley Circulation there, subsequently the subtropical ridge downwind, such as over W Europe, with the associated enhanced EM trough S Polar Jet No explanation exists

  17. Nino 1+2 NAO 500 hPa gph correlation maps for other global circulations previously suggested to affect Israel rainfall: In both the WE-EM dipole is insignificant

  18. North Polar Jet R=-0.50 R=0.61 R=0.66 R=-0.38 R=-0.38 R=0.41 Pacific Warm Pool South Polar Jet Correlation between global-scale systems and the EM upper-trough EM trough–Israel rainfall R = 0.74 All factors - EM trough R = 0.69 EM Upper trough

  19. CONCLUSIONS The EM upper-trough explains > 0.54 of the DJF rainfall variation in the N half of Israel It is activated by 3 external factors: N Polar jet ; S Polar jet ; Indo-Pacific Warm Pool No significant tele-connection exists between Israel rainfall and NAO or ENSO, direct or indirect The EM trough is combined with ridge over W Europe, hence: Cold & wet winters in south Levant coincide with warm & dry winters in W Europe and vice versa

  20. SPECULATION Since the Dead-Sea level reflects the rainfall variations in Israel, the anti-correlation between Israel & W-Europe in the winter suggests that: Under similar climatic regime periods of rise in the Dead-Sea level indicates retreat of icebergs in Western Europe and S-West Scandinavia

  21. 250 hPa speed of composite wind The Atlantic & African jets are more detached in wet years 10 wettest years 10 driest years

  22. Stratospheric Polar Jet (50 mb) 10 Dry Years Normal 10 Wet Years

  23. Correlation maps with Spec. Humidity 400 mb 600 mb 850 mb • Fig. New: Tropical-Subtropical moisture transport • Enhanced Hadely circulation over W-africa – positive, over E-Africa – negative • Wave No. 2 seems to play a role

  24. Another global correlation map with Israel DJF rainfall - 250 hPa meridional wind Note the dominance of wave 5 in NH and 4 in SH

  25. a b Fig. 4: Latitudinal-height cross-section of zonally averaged geopotential height anomaly over 80°S-80°N – 1000-50 hPa domain for: a) the 10 driest seasons and b) the 10 wettest seasons

  26. Height-latitude cross-section of the correlation between the zonal average of geopotential height and rainfall in Israel

  27. Correlation with jets 150 mb North STJ 50 mb S- PJ

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