Carlo Casty
University of Bern
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Surveys in Geophysics | 2001
Heinz Wanner; Stefan Brönnimann; Carlo Casty; Dimitrios Gyalistras; Jürg Luterbacher; Christoph Schmutz; David B. Stephenson; E. Xoplaki
This paper aims to provide a comprehensive review of previous studies and concepts concerning the North Atlantic Oscillation. The North Atlantic Oscillation (NAO) and its recent homologue, the Arctic Oscillation/Northern Hemisphere annular mode (AO/NAM), are the most prominent modes of variability in the Northern Hemisphere winter climate. The NAO teleconnection is characterised by a meridional displacement of atmospheric mass over the North Atlantic area. Its state is usually expressed by the standardised air pressure difference between the Azores High and the Iceland Low. ThisNAO index is a measure of the strength of the westerly flow (positive with strong westerlies, and vice versa). Together with the El Niño/Southern Oscillation (ENSO) phenomenon, the NAO is a major source of seasonal to interdecadal variability in the global atmosphere. On interannual and shorter time scales, the NAO dynamics can be explained as a purely internal mode of variability of the atmospheric circulation. Interdecadal variability maybe influenced, however, by ocean and sea-ice processes.
Developments in Earth and Environmental Sciences | 2006
Jürg Luterbacher; Elena Xoplaki; Carlo Casty; Heinz Wanner; Andreas Pauling; Marcel Küttel; This Rutishauser; Stefan Brönnimann; Erich M. Fischer; Dominik Fleitmann; Fidel González-Rouco; Ricardo García-Herrera; Mariano Barriendos; Fernando Rodrigo; Jose Carlos Gonzalez-Hidalgo; Miguel Angel Saz; Luis Gimeno; Pedro Ribera; Manolo Brunet; Heiko Paeth; Norel Rimbu; Thomas Felis; Jucundus Jacobeit; Armin Dünkeloh; Eduardo Zorita; Joël Guiot; Murat Türkeş; Maria João Alcoforado; Ricardo M. Trigo; Dennis A Wheeler
Publisher Summary This chapter discusses a necessary task for assessing to which degree the industrial period is unusual against the background of pre-industrial climate variability. It is the reconstruction and interpretation of temporal and spatial patterns of climate in earlier centuries. There are distinct differences in the temporal resolution among the various proxies. Some of the proxy records are annually or even higher resolved and hence record year-by-year patterns of climate in past centuries. Several of the temperature reconstructions reveal that the late twentieth century warmth is unprecedented at hemispheric scales and is explained by anthropogenic, greenhouse gas (GHG) forcing. The chapter discusses the availability and potential of long, homogenized instrumental data, documentary, and natural proxies to reconstruct aspects of past climate at local- to regional-scales within the larger Mediterranean area, which includes climate extremes and the incidence of natural disasters. The chapter describes the role of external forcing, including natural and anthropogenic influences, and natural, internal variability in the coupled ocean–atmosphere system at subcontinental scale.
Journal of Climate | 2005
Christoph C. Raible; Thomas F. Stocker; Masakazu Yoshimori; Manuel Renold; Urs Beyerle; Carlo Casty; Juerg Luterbacher
Abstract The decadal trend behavior of the Northern Hemisphere atmospheric circulation is investigated utilizing long-term simulations with different state-of-the-art coupled general circulation models (GCMs) for present-day climate conditions (1990), reconstructions of the past 500 yr, and observations. The multimodel simulations show that strong positive winter North Atlantic Oscillation (NAO) trends are connected with the underlying sea surface temperature (SST) and exhibit an SST tripole trend pattern and a northward shift of the storm-track tail. Strong negative winter trends of the Aleutian low are associated with SST changes in the El Nino–Southern Oscillation (ENSO) region and a westward shift of the storm track in the North Pacific. The observed simultaneous appearance of strong positive NAO and negative Aleutian low trends is very unlikely to occur by chance in the unforced simulations and reconstructions. The positive winter NAO trend of the last 50 yr is not statistically different from the le...
Atmospheric Science Letters | 2001
Jürg Luterbacher; E. Xoplaki; Daniel Dietrich; P. D. Jones; T. D. Davies; D Portis; J. F. González-Rouco; H. von Storch; Dimitrios Gyalistras; Carlo Casty; Heinz Wanner
Climate Dynamics | 2006
Andreas Pauling; Jürg Luterbacher; Carlo Casty; Heinz Wanner
International Journal of Climatology | 2005
Carlo Casty; Heinz Wanner; Jürg Luterbacher; Jan Esper; Reinhard Böhm
Archive | 2006
Andreas Pauling; Jürg Luterbacher; Carlo Casty; Heinz Wanner
Geophysical Research Letters | 2007
Erich M. Fischer; Jürg Luterbacher; Eduardo Zorita; S. F. B. Tett; Carlo Casty; Heinz Wanner
Climate Dynamics | 2006
Stefan Brönnimann; Elena Xoplaki; Carlo Casty; Andreas Pauling; Jürg Luterbacher
Climate Dynamics | 2007
Carlo Casty; Christoph C. Raible; Thomas F. Stocker; Heinz Wanner; Jürg Luterbacher