GC43A-1174
Observed Decrease of North American Winter Temperature Variability

Thursday, 17 December 2015
Poster Hall (Moscone South)
Andrew N Rhines1, Martin Tingley2, Karen A McKinnon1 and Peter J Huybers1, (1)Harvard University, Cambridge, MA, United States, (2)Pennsylvania State University Main Campus, University Park, PA, United States
Abstract:
There is considerable interest in determining whether temperature variability has changed in recent decades. Model ensembles project that extratropical land temperature variance will detectably decrease by 2070. We use quantile regression of station observations to show that decreasing variability is already robustly detectable for North American winter during 1979--2014. Pointwise trends from GHCND stations are mapped into a continuous spatial field using thin-plate spline regression, resolving small-scales while providing uncertainties accounting for spatial covariance and varying station density. We find that variability of daily temperatures, as measured by the difference between the 95th and 5th percentiles, has decreased markedly in winter for both daily minima and maxima. Composites indicate that the reduced spread of winter temperatures primarily results from Arctic amplification decreasing the meridional temperature gradient. Greater observed warming in the 5th relative to the 95th percentile stems from asymmetric effects of advection during cold versus warm days; cold air advection is generally from northerly regions that have experienced greater warming than western or southwestern regions that are generally sourced during warm days.