Investigating Summer 2022 Arctic Cyclone Structure and Evolution
Abstract
Arctic cyclones have large impacts on sea-ice redistribution and are hazardous to com-munities in the region, yet the structure and evolution of summer Arctic cyclones is
not fully understood. The structure and evolution of summer 2022 Arctic cyclones are
investigated using Community Earth Systems Model (CESM) atmosphere-only simu-
lations nudged to European Centre for Medium Range Weather Forecasts (ECMWF)
fifth generation reanalysis (ERA5). We explore the bias of cyclones compared to
ERA5 simulated in CESM when nudging to the full-atmosphere, above the boundary
layer only, and above the troposphere only. Full-atmosphere and above the bound-
ary layer only nudged runs compare reasonably well to ERA5 in cyclone location,
structure, and evolution. A case study analysis demonstrated a warm core cyclone
interacted with a tropospheric polar vortex (TPV) before maturation, which show-
cased the transition between a vertically and horizontally asymmetric storm to a more
axisymmetric storm at maturation in both CESM and ERA5. A composite analysis of
Arctic cyclones in the full-atmosphere and above the boundary layer only nudged runs
showed warm core and cold core cyclones had distinct thermodynamic and dynamic
structures, but combining all cyclones leads to similar structure as in previous studies.
The biases compared to ERA5 when nudging CESM only above the boundary layer
or above the troposphere are largely due to the different boundary layer and cloud
physics parameterizations in ERA5 and CESM, so observational comparison is war-
ranted to contextualize these results. Future work includes observational comparison,
utilizing a higher resolution grid, and evaluating the boundary layer parameterization
in CESM.
Description
Thesis (Master's)--University of Washington, 2024
