Spectra, intermittency, and extremes of weather, macroweather and climate

Abstract It was recently found that the accepted picture of atmospheric variability was in error by a large factor. Rather than being dominated by a series of narrow scale-range quasi-oscillatory processes with an unimportant white noise “background”, it turned out that the variance was instead domi...

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Main Author: S. Lovejoy
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Nature Publishing Group 2018-08-01
Series:Scientific Reports
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-018-30829-4
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spelling doaj-72afe5a9ef004eb89ab0b2cfb6062f242020-12-08T05:17:02ZengNature Publishing GroupScientific Reports2045-23222018-08-018111310.1038/s41598-018-30829-4Spectra, intermittency, and extremes of weather, macroweather and climateS. Lovejoy0Physics, McGill UniversityAbstract It was recently found that the accepted picture of atmospheric variability was in error by a large factor. Rather than being dominated by a series of narrow scale-range quasi-oscillatory processes with an unimportant white noise “background”, it turned out that the variance was instead dominated by a few wide range scaling processes albeit occasionally interspersed with superposed quasi-oscillations. Although the classical model implied that successive million year global temperature averages would differ by mere micro Kelvins, the implausibility had not been noticed. In contrast, the new picture inverts the roles of background and foreground and involves four (possibly five) wide range scaling processes. As with any new paradigm, there are consequences; in this paper we focus on the implications for the spectra, intermittency and the extremes. Intermittency is an expression of the spatio-temporal sparseness of strong events whereas the extremes refer to the tails of their probability distributions and both affect the spectra. Although we give some results for the macro and mega climate regimes, we focus on weather, macroweather and climate: from dissipation to Milankovitch scales.https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-018-30829-4
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author S. Lovejoy
spellingShingle S. Lovejoy
Spectra, intermittency, and extremes of weather, macroweather and climate
Scientific Reports
author_facet S. Lovejoy
author_sort S. Lovejoy
title Spectra, intermittency, and extremes of weather, macroweather and climate
title_short Spectra, intermittency, and extremes of weather, macroweather and climate
title_full Spectra, intermittency, and extremes of weather, macroweather and climate
title_fullStr Spectra, intermittency, and extremes of weather, macroweather and climate
title_full_unstemmed Spectra, intermittency, and extremes of weather, macroweather and climate
title_sort spectra, intermittency, and extremes of weather, macroweather and climate
publisher Nature Publishing Group
series Scientific Reports
issn 2045-2322
publishDate 2018-08-01
description Abstract It was recently found that the accepted picture of atmospheric variability was in error by a large factor. Rather than being dominated by a series of narrow scale-range quasi-oscillatory processes with an unimportant white noise “background”, it turned out that the variance was instead dominated by a few wide range scaling processes albeit occasionally interspersed with superposed quasi-oscillations. Although the classical model implied that successive million year global temperature averages would differ by mere micro Kelvins, the implausibility had not been noticed. In contrast, the new picture inverts the roles of background and foreground and involves four (possibly five) wide range scaling processes. As with any new paradigm, there are consequences; in this paper we focus on the implications for the spectra, intermittency and the extremes. Intermittency is an expression of the spatio-temporal sparseness of strong events whereas the extremes refer to the tails of their probability distributions and both affect the spectra. Although we give some results for the macro and mega climate regimes, we focus on weather, macroweather and climate: from dissipation to Milankovitch scales.
url https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-018-30829-4
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