Did you feel the pressure yesterday?
Feel a bit weighted down? If so, it may not be due to the political energy in the air.
Yesterday morning, sea level pressure around the Northwest was the greatest in ten years.
The average sea level pressure is approximately 1013 hPa (hPa is a unit of pressure).
Yesterday morning, several northwest locations experienced 1041-1045 hPa. This is high...very high.
Higher than any other time since 2015 in our area. To illustrate, here are the pressures observed at 10 AM yesterday (see below). Around 1042 hPa near Seattle and higher to the north and east.
The pressure was above normal over a vast swatch of the west, as shown by the pressure map at 10 AM Wednesday. The shading shows the difference from normal.. with red being much above normal.
This high-pressure interlude is associated with a high amplitude upper-level wave pattern, with a ridge off the West Coast and a trough over the eastern U.S. (see upper level (500 hPa level) map at the same time).
The origin of this unusual situation is most probably the result of natural variability. My group has done regional climate simulations assuming aggressive increases in CO2. As shown below, global warming generally leads to lower pressures. This makes sense: warmer air is less dense, which leads to lower pressure below. Global warming also does not lead to transient ridges over the West Coast, something I have researched and published on.
Announcement
Dr. Mass, is it possible that we here in the US Northwest are experiencing Hyperpressure Whiplash as one consequence of CO2-driven climate change; i.e., an emerging physical phenomena somewhat akin to Dr. Swain's Hydroclimate Whiplash in California?
ReplyDeleteIf indeed a climate-driven Hyperpressure Whiplash phenomena does in fact exist, perhaps Dr. Swain might be persuaded to add this cause for concern to his ever-growing list of concerns associated with climate change and the world's increasing carbon emissions.
Dr. Swain might also take up the question of whether or not Hyperpressure Whiplash and Hydroclimate Whiplash have some kind of physical interaction with each other, thus enabling a multi-phenomena amplification process to become operative -- a process which increases the combined adverse effects above and beyond what each separate process could produce by itself.
I'm sure Governor Newsom could, as one of his wildfire response actions, find several million dollars in California's state budget to fund a UCLA study of Hyperpressure Whiplash and its possible interactions with other wildfire-producing physical phenomena.
And if it becomes necessary to sacrifice the purchase of eight or ten new LAFD fire trucks to cover the costs of this study, I'm sure UCLA could write a Hyperpressure Whiplash study proposal which thoroughly justifies the funding trade-off, at least to Governor Newsom's satisfaction, anyway.
Those graphs appear to coincide with the 11-year solar cycles. Have you ever come across Ben Davidson and his amazing work with space weather?
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