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Tim Woollings

Professor of Physical Climate Science

Research theme

  • Climate physics

Sub department

  • Atmospheric, Oceanic and Planetary Physics

Research groups

  • Climate dynamics
Tim.Woollings@physics.ox.ac.uk
Telephone: 01865 (2)82427
Atmospheric Physics Clarendon Laboratory, room 203
  • About
  • Publications

Storm track sensitivity to sea surface temperature resolution in a regional atmosphere model

Climate Dynamics 35:2 (2010) 341-353

Authors:

T Woollings, B Hoskins, M Blackburn, D Hassell, K Hodges

Abstract:

A high resolution regional atmosphere model is used to investigate the sensitivity of the North Atlantic storm track to the spatial and temporal resolution of the sea surface temperature (SST) data used as a lower boundary condition. The model is run over an unusually large domain covering all of the North Atlantic and Europe, and is shown to produce a very good simulation of the observed storm track structure. The model is forced at the lateral boundaries with 15-20 years of data from the ERA-40 reanalysis, and at the lower boundary by SST data of differing resolution. The impacts of increasing spatial and temporal resolution are assessed separately, and in both cases increasing the resolution leads to subtle, but significant changes in the storm track. In some, but not all cases these changes act to reduce the small storm track biases seen in the model when it is forced with low-resolution SSTs. In addition there are several clear mesoscale responses to increased spatial SST resolution, with surface heat fluxes and convective precipitation increasing by 10-20% along the Gulf Stream SST gradient. © 2009 Springer-Verlag.
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Top-down solar modulation of climate: Evidence for centennial-scale change

Environmental Research Letters 5:3 (2010)

Authors:

M Lockwood, C Bell, T Woollings, RG Harrison, LJ Gray, JD Haigh

Abstract:

During the descent into the recent 'exceptionally' low solar minimum, observations have revealed a larger change in solar UV emissions than seen at the same phase of previous solar cycles. This is particularly true at wavelengths responsible for stratospheric ozone production and heating. This implies that 'top-down' solar modulation could be a larger factor in long-term tropospheric change than previously believed, many climate models allowing only for the 'bottom-up' effect of the less-variable visible and infrared solar emissions. We present evidence for long-term drift in solar UV irradiance, which is not found in its commonly used proxies. In addition, we find that both stratospheric and tropospheric winds and temperatures show stronger regional variations with those solar indices that do show long-term trends. A top-down climate effect that shows long-term drift (and may also be out of phase with the bottom-up solar forcing) would change the spatial response patterns and would mean that climate-chemistry models that have sufficient resolution in the stratosphere would become very important for making accurate regional/seasonal climate predictions. Our results also provide a potential explanation of persistent palaeoclimate results showing solar influence on regional or local climate indicators. © 2010 IOP Publishing Ltd.
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Associations between stratospheric variability and tropospheric blocking

JOURNAL OF GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH-ATMOSPHERES 115 (2010) ARTN D06108

Authors:

T Woollings, A Charlton-Perez, S Ineson, AG Marshall, G Masato
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Can the frequency of blocking be described by a red noise process?

Journal of the Atmospheric Sciences 66:7 (2009) 2143-2149

Authors:

G Masato, BJ Hoskins, TJ Woollings

Abstract:

The frequency of persistent atmospheric blocking events in the 40-yr ECMWF Re-Analysis (ERA-40) is compared with the blocking frequency produced by a simple first-order Markov model designed to predict the time evolution of a blocking index [defined by the meridional contrast of potential temperature on the 2-PVU surface (1 PVU ≡ 1 × 10-6 K m2 kg-1 s-1)]. With the observed spatial coherence built into the model, it is able to reproduce the main regions of blocking occurrence and the frequencies of sector blocking very well. This underlines the importance of the climatological background flow in determining the locations of high blocking occurrence as being the regions where the mean midlatitude meridional potential vorticity (PV) gradient is weak. However, when only persistent blocking episodes are considered, the model is unable to simulate the observed frequencies. It is proposed that this persistence beyond that given by a red noise model is due to the self-sustaining nature of the blocking phenomenon. © 2009 American Meteorological Society.
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Tropical and Extratropical Responses of the North Atlantic Atmospheric Circulation to a Sustained Weakening of the MOC

JOURNAL OF CLIMATE 22:11 (2009) 3146-3155

Authors:

David J Brayshaw, Tim Woollings, Michael Vellinga
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