The Largest Ever Recorded Heatwave—Characteristics and Attribution of the Antarctic Heatwave of March 2022
Abstract
An unprecedented heatwave impacted East Antarctica in March 2022, peaking at 39°C above climatology, the largest temperature anomaly ever recorded globally. We investigate the causes of the heatwave, the impact of climate change, and a climate model's ability in simulating such an event. The heatwave, which was skillfully forecast, resulted from a highly anomalous large-scale circulation pattern that advected an Australian airmass to East Antarctica in 4 days and produced record atmospheric heat fluxes. Southern Ocean sea surface temperatures anomalies had a minimal impact on the heatwave's amplitude. Simulations from a climate model fail to simulate such a large temperature anomaly mostly due to biases in its large-scale circulation variability, showcasing a pathway for future model improvement in simulating extreme heatwaves. The heatwave was made 2°C warmer by climate change, and end of 21st century heatwaves may be an additional 5-6°C warmer, raising the prospect of near-melting temperatures over the interior of East Antarctica.
- Publication:
-
Geophysical Research Letters
- Pub Date:
- September 2023
- DOI:
- Bibcode:
- 2023GeoRL..5004910B
- Keywords:
-
- heatwaves;
- Antarctica;
- attribution;
- climate change;
- climate models;
- atmospheric variability