Effects on winter circulation of short and long term solar wind changes

  • Limin Zhou
  • , Brian Tinsley*
  • , Jing Huang
  • *Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

26 Scopus citations

Abstract

Indices of the North Atlantic Oscillation and the Arctic Oscillation show correlations on the day-to-day timescale with the solar wind speed (SWS). Minima in the indices were found on days of SWS minima during years of high stratospheric aerosol loading. The spatial distribution of surface pressure changes during 1963-2011 with day-to-day changes in SWS shows a pattern resembling the NAO. Such a pattern was noted for year-to-year variations by Boberg and Lundstedt (2002), who compared NAO variations with the geo-effective solar wind electric field (the monthly average SWS multiplied by the average southward component, i.e., negative Bz component, of the interplanetary magnetic field). The spatial distribution of the correlations of geopotential height changes in the troposphere and stratosphere with the SWS; the geo-effective electric field (SWS∗Bz); and the solar 10.7 cm flux suggests that solar wind inputs connected to the troposphere via the global electric circuit, together with solar ultraviolet irradiance acting on the stratosphere, affect regional atmospheric dynamics.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)2478-2490
Number of pages13
JournalAdvances in Space Research
Volume54
Issue number12
DOIs
StatePublished - 15 Dec 2014

Keywords

  • Arctic Oscillation
  • Global electric circuit
  • North Atlantic Oscillation
  • Relativistic electrons
  • Solar wind speed

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