4.3 Article

Interdecadal relationship between the wintertime haze frequency over Beijing andmega-ENSO

Journal

ATMOSPHERIC SCIENCE LETTERS
Volume 21, Issue 12, Pages -

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/asl.1007

Keywords

Beijing; interdecadal variations; mega-ENSO; winter haze frequency

Funding

  1. Atmospheric Pollution Control of the Prime Minister Fund [DQGG0104]
  2. National Basic Research Development (973) program of China [2012CB417205]
  3. National Natural Science Foundation of China [41790471]
  4. Strategic Priority Research Program of Chinese Academy of Sciences [XDA20100304]

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Observational analyses suggest that natural or internal climate variability plays a crucial role in modulating wintertime haze days in Beijing (WHDBJ) on decadal timescales, which may overwhelm the effect of human emissions to some extent. This study links the variations in WHD(BJ)to the mega-El Nino-Southern Oscillation (ENSO), a newly defined ENSO-related pattern with a vaster range of variability, on decadal timescales. The mega-ENSO delineates an apparent out-of-phase relationship with WHDBJ, which could be used to explain past and recent decreases in WHD(BJ)in 1961-1971 and 1997-2012, as well as the increase in WHD(BJ)in 1972-1996. The positive phase of the mega-ENSO can induce a high dynamical scavenging efficiency of pollutants over the Beijing area through notable in situ low-level northerly wind anomalies that are associated with a quasi-barotropic anticyclonic anomaly centered around Lake Baikal, thus reducing the frequency of haze days on decadal timescales, and vice versa for the negative phase. The mega-ENSO can influence interdecadal predictions of the long-term occurrence of haze events over Beijing. Therefore, it will be focused upon in future routine operations.

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