Not exact matches
The new research is a
regional climate study of historical
sea level pressures, winds and temperatures over the eastern Pacific Ocean and draws no conclusions about climate change on a global scale.
Arbetter, 4.7, Statistical A statistical model using
regional observations of
sea ice area and global NCEP air temperature,
sea level pressure, and freezing degree day estimates continues the trend of projecting below - average summer
sea ice conditions for the Arctic.
The question would seem to be whether the «models of
sea level» attempt to correlate
regional variation in water depth / mass in production of
pressure variation in a «water column», if it is to be understood the limited outline of the question as placed, with relation to
regional «surface
level» displacement.
[2] Bhend J, Whetton P (2013) Consistency of simulated and observed
regional changes in temperature,
sea level pressure and precipitation.
Lukovich et al. (Centre for Earth Observation Science, U. of Manitoba); 4.6; Heuristic - Dynamics Investigation of dynamical atmospheric contributions in spring to
sea ice conditions in fall, based on comparison of 2011 and 2007 stratospheric and surface winds and
sea level pressure (SLP) in April and May suggests
regional differences in
sea ice extent in fall, in a manner consistent with recent studies highlighting the importance of coastal geometry in seasonal interpretations of
sea ice cover (Eisenman, 2010).
Though there can be significant differences in
regional surface impacts between one SSW event and another, the typical pattern includes changes in
sea level pressure resembling the negative phase of the North Atlantic Oscillation (NAO) / Arctic Oscillation (AO), (representing a southward shift in the Atlantic storm track), wetter than average conditions for much of Europe, cold air outbreaks throughout the mid-latitudes, and warmer than average conditions in eastern Canada and subtropical Asia (see figure below, left panel).
Variability in
sea level pressure decreases on average in the Southern Hemisphere, while in the Northern Hemisphere there are
regional differences.»