Identification of atmospheric and oceanic teleconnection patterns in a 20-year global data set of the atmospheric water vapour column measured from satellites in the visible spectral range
We used a global long-term (1995–2015) data set of total column water vapour (TCWV) derived from satellite observations to quantify to which extent the temporal patterns of various teleconnections can be identified in this data set. To our knowledge, such a comprehensive global TCWV data set was rar...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Atmospheric chemistry and physics 2021-04, Vol.21 (7), p.5315-5353 |
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Zusammenfassung: | We used a global long-term (1995–2015) data set of total column
water vapour (TCWV) derived from satellite observations to quantify to which
extent the temporal patterns of various teleconnections can be identified in
this data set. To our knowledge, such a comprehensive global TCWV data set
was rarely used for teleconnection studies. One important property of the
TCWV data set is that it is purely based on observational data. We developed
a new empirical method to decide whether a teleconnection index is
significantly detected in the global data set. We compared our new method to
well-established hypothesis tests and found good agreement with the results
of our approach. Based on our empirical method more than 40 teleconnection
indices were significantly detected in the global TCWV data set derived from
satellite observations. In addition to the satellite data we also applied
our method to other global data sets derived from ERA-Interim. One important
finding is that the spatial patterns obtained for the ERA TCWV data are very
similar to the observational TCWV data set indicating a high consistency
between the satellite and ERA data. Moreover, similar results are also found
for two selections of ERA data (either all data or mainly clear-sky data).
This finding indicates that the clear-sky bias of the satellite data set is
negligible for the results of this study. However, for some indices, also
systematic differences in the spatial patterns between the satellite and
model data set were found probably indicating possible shortcomings in the
model data. For most “traditional” teleconnection data sets (surface
temperature, surface pressure, geopotential heights and meridional winds at
different altitudes) a smaller number of significant teleconnection indices
was found than for the TCWV data sets, while for zonal winds at different
altitudes, the number of significant teleconnection indices (up to
> 50) was higher. The strongest teleconnection signals were found
in the data sets of tropospheric geopotential heights and surface pressure.
In all global data sets, no “other indices” (solar variability,
stratospheric AOD or hurricane frequency) were significantly detected. Since
many teleconnection indices are strongly correlated, we also applied our
method to a set of orthogonalised indices, which represent the dominant
independent temporal teleconnection patterns. The number of significantly
detected orthogonalised indices (20) was found to be much smaller tha |
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ISSN: | 1680-7324 1680-7316 1680-7324 |
DOI: | 10.5194/acp-21-5315-2021 |