Widespread hot extremes have been seen throughout the world in recent years, causing heat-related mortality and harming crops and livestock. In summer 2018, a record-breaking heatwave swept across large areas of Northeast Asia. The China Meteorological Administration issued high-temperature warnings for 33 consecutive days.
In Japan, at least 71,266 people required hospitalization for heatstroke. To make things worse, the 2018 event was probably not a random or an individual case, according to a new study published in Environmental Research Letters.
2018 heatwave
In the study, the 2018 event was used as a rear-view mirror to investigate what has caused more extreme summer events over Northeast Asia, and in particular, to look into the role of anomalous anticyclones over Northeast Asia.
An anticyclone is an area of high atmospheric pressure, which causes settled weather conditions, and, in summer, clear skies and high temperatures. But how much the anomalous anticyclone circulation would contribute to extreme heat events over Northeast Asia still remains unknown. Ph.D. student Liwen Ren, the lead author, said:
“Our study, for the first time, gave a quantitative estimation of the contribution of circulation to such a heat event over Northeast Asia, by using the flow analog method. We found that an anomalous anticyclone over Northeast Asia was responsible for nearly half of the magnitude in extreme heat events of 2018.”
The researchers found that such anomalous anticyclones similar to that in 2018 have become worse and more common in recent decades (1991-2017) than in the past (1958-1990). Further, this kind of dynamical (anticyclone) change in recent decades, together with thermodynamical change (e.g., mean temperature shift toward a warmer state with increasing greenhouse gases) has made such kinds of extreme events more likely to happen over Northeast Asia. Prof. Tianjun Zhou, the corresponding author of the study, said:
“We also found that, the more extreme the heat event is, the larger the contribution of thermodynamical change will be, with a contribution of at least 80%. This implies that as long as global warming continues, we will face higher risk for extreme heat events over Northeast Asia in the next decades.”
Provided by: Chinese Academy of Sciences [Note: Materials may be edited for content and length.]
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