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Colder Winters/gulf Stream


IanfromNewark

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Posted
  • Location: Stanwell(south side of Heathrow Ap)
  • Weather Preferences: Thunderstorms, squally fronts, snow, frost, very mild if no snow or frost
  • Location: Stanwell(south side of Heathrow Ap)

The unusual jet stream pattern maybe caused by the low solar activity affecting the stratosphere which affects the troposphere below it where the jet is.

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Posted
  • Location: Stanwell(south side of Heathrow Ap)
  • Weather Preferences: Thunderstorms, squally fronts, snow, frost, very mild if no snow or frost
  • Location: Stanwell(south side of Heathrow Ap)

1-Solar activity-solar minimum and the effects on the stratosphere/troposphere.

2-jet stream, unusual pattern for a long period, and still is now.

3-Prolonged blocking patterns.

4-NAO/AO extreme negative phases last winter, NAO prolonged unusual negative periods 12months+.

5-Azores high summer 2010-not moving much north.

6-extreme SOI pattern september2010.

7-Volcanic eruptions during the last few years-delayed effect on the upper atmosphere.

8-weaker GS/NAD(?)

LOTS OF INTEREST!

1-Solar activity-solar minimum and the effects on the stratosphere/troposphere.

2-jet stream, unusual pattern for a long period, and still is now.

3-Prolonged blocking patterns.

4-NAO/AO extreme negative phases last winter, NAO prolonged unusual negative periods 12months+.

5-Azores high summer 2010-not moving much north.

6-extreme SOI pattern september2010.

7-Volcanic eruptions during the last few years-delayed effect on the upper atmosphere.

8-weaker GS/NAD(?)

LOTS OF INTEREST!

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Posted
  • Location: Mytholmroyd, West Yorks.......
  • Weather Preferences: Hot & Sunny, Cold & Snowy
  • Location: Mytholmroyd, West Yorks.......

Just so we're clear. The Gulf Stream is the wind driven surface current.

The MOC is the current that sinks off NW tip of Greenland and had a bit of a slow down through the naughties (until the record Arctic melt of 07' bump started it again).

The Gulf stream is unaffected by the need for descending waters to drive it (conveyor) as it is driven by the prevailing winds across the Atlantic?

Is the topic about drastic reversals in the west East movement of our weather (across the N. Atlantic Basin) or about the MOC faltering at it's descent points?

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  • 3 weeks later...
Posted
  • Location: Taasinge, Denmark
  • Location: Taasinge, Denmark

Hello, a new user here, retired naval architect / shipbuilder, sailor and keen gardener living in Denmark.

I thought readers might be interested to know I just read on a Danish website that certain Polish meteorologists in October 2010 predicted this winter 2010 / 11 would be the coldest in 1000 years. I couldn't trace the source back to its origin, but it seems the Poles put their prediction down to the Gulf Steam failing, and when it was said that the BP oil catastrophe was partly to blame for the GS stalling, the Danes understandably laughed at the whole theory of another cold winter.

In the meantime, the sea around the island where I live has frozen a few weeks earlier than it did last year - which itself was the coldest since 1995 - and is now thick enough to walk on. Furthermore, Denmark has just experienced the second white Christmas in a row, which hasn't happened here the last 150 years. The icebreakers which were last used in 1995 have started their engines, which are normally mothballed to preserve them, Bornholm is buried in unprecedented snow, and one of the roads into our village is is so blocked that snow ploughs have given up, and they'll have to start digging the stuff onto lorries and drive it away somewhere.

last November, the Danish Met Institute issued a forecast for December 2010 to February 2011 inclusive, which gave out that Denmark's mean temperature for these three months would be 0.8 degrees ABOVE the average for 1961 - 1990, and that forecast has been updated to cover January to March 2011, now anticipating I think 0.5 degrees higher than average temperature, notwithstanding that December has been about 5 degrees BELOW average. Around 18th December, they were confident that a durable thaw would commence around 23rd / 24th December, yet this morning it is still -6 degrees, and their forcast right now is for continuing sub-zero temperatures for at least another week.

Now I'll readily concede I am a bit slow to catch on, but how is it the Danish Met Institute can get things so badly wrong? I doubt this will be the coldest Danish winter for 1000 years, and even if it is we have no reliable data to tell us how cold it was in, say, 1327. Nonetheless, it seems the factors affecting climate are simply not fully understood, and forecasters are dabbling in divination.

Does anyone know if the meteorological profession is doing any genuine soul-searching?

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Posted
  • Location: Rochester, Kent
  • Location: Rochester, Kent

Hale predicted that this period would be like this around the turn of the 19th/20th century - the Hale-Solar Cycle ...

Technical description, here. The reversal of solar magnetic fields every Hale cycle (the average length of which is 22 years) is statistically linked to cold winters in North Western Europe. No physical explanation of why this is the case is yet known.

As far as I know the last Hale cycle began in 2008 ... what was winter like during the early to mid 1980s in North-West Europe?

Edited by VillagePlank
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Posted
  • Location: Taasinge, Denmark
  • Location: Taasinge, Denmark

Hale predicted that this period would be like this around the turn of the 19th/20th century - the Hale-Solar Cycle ...

Technical description, here. The reversal of solar magnetic fields every Hale cycle (the average length of which is 22 years) is statistically linked to cold winters in North Western Europe. No physical explanation of why this is the case is yet known.

As far as I know the last Hale cycle began in 2008 ... what was winter like during the early to mid 1980s in North-West Europe?

1981 was very cold in Denmark, with the sea frozen until late March. 1983 was almost as bad as I recall it.

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Posted
  • Location: Taasinge, Denmark
  • Location: Taasinge, Denmark

Hale predicted that this period would be like this around the turn of the 19th/20th century - the Hale-Solar Cycle ...

Technical description, here. The reversal of solar magnetic fields every Hale cycle (the average length of which is 22 years) is statistically linked to cold winters in North Western Europe. No physical explanation of why this is the case is yet known.

As far as I know the last Hale cycle began in 2008 ... what was winter like during the early to mid 1980s in North-West Europe?

VP, I did warn that I am slow to catch onto some things. I can grasp the bimodal distribution of sunspot numbers every 22 years or so, during which period the magnetic polarity of these goes through a complete cycle. Am I to gather that colder winters are thought to coincide with sunspot minima of a particular magnetic polarity? That certainly corresponds with the varying lowest winter temperatures recorded at Whitby High lighthouse 1962-63, 1984-86, and again 2009-10, and presumably this year too. However, I cannot see the value of such phenomena when colder winters also occurred 1967-69, 1977-79, and indeed, 1981 - 1987 in general had colder than average minima except for 1983-84.

Given that it seems to me colder than average winters in recent times do not correlate very well with Hale cycles, would you kindly point out what I might have overlooked?

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Posted
  • Location: Rochester, Kent
  • Location: Rochester, Kent

VP, I did warn that I am slow to catch onto some things. I can grasp the bimodal distribution of sunspot numbers every 22 years or so, during which period the magnetic polarity of these goes through a complete cycle. Am I to gather that colder winters are thought to coincide with sunspot minima of a particular magnetic polarity? That certainly corresponds with the varying lowest winter temperatures recorded at Whitby High lighthouse 1962-63, 1984-86, and again 2009-10, and presumably this year too. However, I cannot see the value of such phenomena when colder winters also occurred 1967-69, 1977-79, and indeed, 1981 - 1987 in general had colder than average minima except for 1983-84.

Given that it seems to me colder than average winters in recent times do not correlate very well with Hale cycles, would you kindly point out what I might have overlooked?

If you consider a "random" walk, then if the Hale cycle exists (it does) you would see that that walk posting greater negative anomalies approx every 22 years (hence not "random"). This, of course, does not exclude that walk from having even colder winters outside of that cycle, but those colder winters would be randomly distributed.

With modern computers one can easily, and quickly discern such cycles from a temperature series using Fourier analysis, or even Wavelets. See my blog (in my signature) for a preliminary CET cycle analysis. In this analysis the 23 year cycle discerned, I presume, is the approx 22 year Hale cycle. There is greater magnitude 17 year cycle which I have not been able to determine it's origin.

By the way - welcome to NetW!

Edited by VillagePlank
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Posted
  • Location: Dublin
  • Location: Dublin

Hello, a new user here, retired naval architect / shipbuilder, sailor and keen gardener living in Denmark.

I thought readers might be interested to know I just read on a Danish website that certain Polish meteorologists in October 2010 predicted this winter 2010 / 11 would be the coldest in 1000 years. I couldn't trace the source back to its origin, but it seems the Poles put their prediction down to the Gulf Steam failing, and when it was said that the BP oil catastrophe was partly to blame for the GS stalling, the Danes understandably laughed at the whole theory of another cold winter.

This "coldest in 1000 years" is becoming a bit of an urban myth. There were links posted on a thread in the UKWW forum some time ago that explained how this story arose. Basically a climatologist was interviewed and asked, hypothetically, what would be the consequences of a slow-down or shut down in the Gulf Stream (or was it the nAD?). His response was along the lines that it would result in a 'millennium' winter. The media then had a field day and turned the story into te "coldest winter in 1000 years" on the way. It was attributed to Polish scientists. Further trawling of the Net shows that, once the story took wings, Russian scientits were dragged into the story and they issued a rebuttal of sorts insofar as saying that while a cold winter was expected they diagreed with the "Polish" view!

This is really a case of the media generating a fascinating, headlin-grabbing story from what was an opinion and slowly it becomes scientific reseach and a forecast!!

Will pos links when(if) I can find them again!

*EDIT* Here is one link;

Russian Winter View

Joe

Edited by jcw
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Posted
  • Location: Taasinge, Denmark
  • Location: Taasinge, Denmark

If you consider a "random" walk, then if the Hale cycle exists (it does) you would see that that walk posting greater negative anomalies approx every 22 years (hence not "random"). This, of course, does not exclude that walk from having even colder winters outside of that cycle, but those colder winters would be randomly distributed.

By the way - welcome to NetW!

Thanks for the welcome VP.

I am afraid you have the better of me, for although I can picture for myself a random walk, I cannot see just how a walk can post things. Never mind, I am sure the Hale cycle exists, and the excellent description you provided is indisputable. Nonetheless, I am left thinking that any acceptable all-encompassing theory of long-term weather forecasting must be awfully complex and full of ifs and buts. That would explain the Danish Met Institute's (in my view) poor performance in recent years. Perhaps they should take a leaf out of the Met Office's book and give up publishing seasonal forecasts.

EDIT: a silly spelling mistake occurred.

Edited by Alan Robinson
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The following article reports a paper which atributes the recent colder winters experienced in Europe to disappearing arctic sea ice. The larger area of exposed warmer (relatively speaking) ocean water facilitates northerly blocking patterns and hence the colder winters recently experienced in Europe. The phenomenon is only transient in nature however as further degredation of the ice cover will lead to a return to milder winters eventually.

article

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Posted
  • Location: Rochester, Kent
  • Location: Rochester, Kent

Thanks for the welcome VP.

I am afraid you have the better of me, for although I can picture for myself a random walk, I cannot see just how a walk can post things. Never mind, I am sure the Hale cycle exists, and the excellent description you provided is indisputable. Nonetheless, I am left thinking that any acceptable all-encompassing theory of long-term weather forecasting must be awfully complex and full of ifs and buts. That would explain the Danish Met Institute's (in my view) poor performance in recent years. Perhaps they should take a leaf out of the Met Office's book and give up publishing seasonal forecasts.

EDIT: a silly spelling mistake occurred.

I'll post something on my blog tomorrow, hopefully, that should help me explain myself a bit more. Pretty useless at getting what's in my head out, to be honest.

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Posted
  • Location: Taasinge, Denmark
  • Location: Taasinge, Denmark

The following article reports a paper which atributes the recent colder winters experienced in Europe to disappearing arctic sea ice. The larger area of exposed warmer (relatively speaking) ocean water facilitates northerly blocking patterns and hence the colder winters recently experienced in Europe. The phenomenon is only transient in nature however as further degredation of the ice cover will lead to a return to milder winters eventually.

article

That really is interesting cuckoo. In connection with this year's high global temperature I saw graphics recently showing that great swathes of northern Canada and most of Siberia were in November as much as 10 degrees warmer than average. The ideas in the article you kindly linked fits very well with actual land temperatures near the Arctic Circle. What I'd like to see now is some clever Dick explain the connection to Queensland's most severe floods in 150 years, for I am personally convinced these phenomena all interact globally, but in a way we still do not fully grasp.

Not that I am religious you understand, but the more I think of it, the more I respect Einstein's comment that God does not throw dice. Because last winter's freezing conditions (worse here than this year so far) ruined my spring cabbages, I began looking into the North Atlantic Oscillation, which seems to me nothing other than a comparison of barometer readings in Reykjavik and Lisbon or Gibraltar. I was fascinated by the cylic nature of the NAO index, and after analysing it very crudely, was so bold to predict that maritime type weather would return to NW Europe latest August 2010, and would persist until, say, February or March 2011. How wrong can I get! But then, that's what we get for using inductive arguments. Unless we are fully acquainted with the facts, the exception to the rule will always pop up just when we least expect it.

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  • 7 months later...
Posted
  • Location: Taasinge, Denmark
  • Location: Taasinge, Denmark

Found a link that could be quite helpful:

http://www.bbc.co.uk...onment-13210419

Nice graphics Ledders, but it is hardly new information is it? Mariners have known for centuries that ocean currents are highly complex, mixing and merging, strengthening and weakening, setting this way and that. I'd like to see a similar simulation of the Southwest Monsoon in the north Indian Ocean. That would be spectacular, particularly around Socotra island; and not forgetting that the currents change fundamentally within less than six months.

For the time being, my view is that people are aware of these phenomena, but we are a long way from fully understanding them, their causes, interactions and their effects.

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