Jet stream moved northwards 270 miles in 22 years; climate change to blame?
Climate change is forcing the jet stream higher and closer to the pole in both the Northern and Southern Hemisphere, according research published this April in the journal Geophysical Research Letters. In their paper, "Historical trends in the jet streams", researchers Cristina Archer and Ken Caldeira of Stanford's Carnegie Institution of Washington analyzed data from 1979-2001, and found that the Northern Hemisphere jet stream moved northward at approximately 125 miles per decade (270 miles during the 22-year period of the study). The jet moved higher by 5-23 meters during this period, and the wind speeds decreased by about 1 mph. Archer and Caldeira's study confirms other research showing a poleward movement of the jet stream in recent decades (Fu et al., 2006; Hu and Fu, 2007). All of these changes are consistent with the behavior of the jet stream predicted by global warming theory. For example, Lorenz and DeWeaver (2007) found poleward shifts of the jet stream by 2100 in the forecasts of 15 climate models used to formulate the "official" word on climate, the 2007 Intergovernmental Panel for Climate Change (IPCC) report. However, the authors were careful not to say how much of this shift in the jet stream was due to natural causes versus human-caused climate change. It is unknown if the jet stream has natural decades-long changes in its path that could account for the observed poleward shift.

Figure 1. The jet stream is located where the strongest winds at the top of the troposphere are found (35,000-45,000 feet high, 200-300 mb in pressure).
Archer and Caldeira note that "These changes in jet stream latitude, altitude, and strength have likely affected, and perhaps will continue to affect, the formation and evolution of storms in the mid-latitudes and of hurricanes in the sub-tropical regions." They don't specify what these changes might be. There is very little research that has been done suggesting how changes in the jet stream might affect hurricane formation and strength. One effect we may begin to see in coming decades is a reduction and/or delay in the number of hurricanes that recurve northward out to sea. Recurvature occurs when a hurricane begins to "feel" the westerly winds of the jet stream. As the jet stream continues to move northward and weaken as the globe warms, we can expect that hurricanes moving though the Caribbean will be less likely to recurve, resulting in more hurricane strikes in Mexico and Central America. Unfortunately, the quality of the Atlantic hurricane database for non-U.S. landfalls is not very good, and it will be several decades before we will be able to tell if the number of hurricane landfalls in Mexico and Central America is increasing due to a poleward shift in the jet stream.
References
Fu, Q., C. M. Johanson, J. M. Wallace, and T. Reichler (2006), Enhanced mid-latitude tropospheric warming in satellite measurements, Science, 312, 1179, doi:10.1126/science.1125566.
Hu, Y., and Q. Fu (2007), Observed poleward expansion of the Hadley circulation since 1979, Atmos. Chem. Phys. Disc., 7, 9367.9384.
Lorenz, D. J., and E. T. DeWeaver (2007), Tropopause height and zonal wind response to global warming in the IPCC scenario integrations, J. Geophys. Res., 112, D10119, doi:10.1029/2006JD008087.
Jeff Masters
Reader Comments
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1547. NEwxguy 3:10 PM GMT on June 09, 2008
the building here at work is down,can you say preventive maintenance before there is a heatwave??
You talkin' 'bout the ac?
Yeh,its 87 deg inside our office
I know what you mean. Our doors are open.
87.1 °F / 30 °C
Mostly Cloudy
Humidity: 62%
Dew Point: 72 °F / 22 °C
mobile homes are just easily distroyed and unsafe. An EF0 can do reprehensible damage to a mobile home but that same EF0 hits a neighborhood and you wont even see a shingle out of place.
This is true but some mobile homes are well constructed. My grandma has lived in the same mobile home in the middle of an open field (where all the wind can hit it full force) for about 13 years. It went through Katrina (she lives about 45 min's north of New Orleans), Rita, Lili, and other hurricanes, and even a tornado that knocked numerous trees down around it. Still standing strong. Never lost a shingle, or siding for that matter. The skirting blew off, but that happens when the wind gets over 40mph. It's a single wide 16 X 80.
It's just a simple free standing mobile home. The only anchorage it has, besides it's tie downs, is the two car carport attached on one end. Now the carport has seen some damage in it's time, but that's about it.
Invest 92E
Powerful Atlantic Storm
I noticed it this morning on the still image of the NHC site, but when I tried to load the loop on my computer it didnt work. I think it has something to do with our system restrictions here at work and the whole JAVA thing.
Sorry All, especially TampaSpin, when I previewed the script I copied and tested it and it worked just fine, but when it posted it got corrupted somehow. I reposted an image of the script but that is barely readable.
If you scroll down this link you will find the original post from Chippy_Minton with the code that you can just copy into Notepad.
Powerful Atlantic Storm
must be a powerful
cat 78 atleast...
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