Fourth Symposium on Policy and Socio—Economic Research

P1.2

Weekly cycles in Spain and its connections with changes in Sea Level Pressure over the North-Atlantic sector

PAPER WITHDRAWN

Arturo Sanchez-Lorenzo, University of Barcelona, Barcelona, Spain; and A. Garcia-Manuel, J. Calbo, J. Martin-Vide, C. Beck, and G. García-Soriano

Weekly cycles of different climatic variables, such as temperature, rainfall, cloudiness or sunshine duration have been detected over Spain (Southern Europe) during the 1961-2004 period. The analyzed series are derived from stations located in different climatological and geographical areas with different level of urban influence. Therefore, the weekly cycles can hardly be related to direct urban effects. Contrarily, we suggest that the weekly cycles may be related with changes in the sea level pressure (SLP) associated to perturbations in the atmospheric circulation over Western Europe, which we hypothesize that may be due to an indirect effect of anthropogenic aerosols. We detected opposite signals between wintertime (Sanchez-Lorenzo et al., 2008) and summertime, in accordance with findings by Gong et al. (2006) for China. In fact, we observed an increase (decrease) in SLP over Southern Europe during the weekends (weekdays) and consequently a decrease (increase) of anticyclonic conditions during the central weekdays (weekends) during the wintertime (summertime). These SLP changes could explain the detected weekly periodicities over Spain.

References:

Gong, D.-Y., D. Gou, and C.-H. Ho (2006), Weekend effect in diurnal temperature range in China: Opposite signals between winter and summer, J. Geophys. Res., 111, D18113, doi:10.1029/2006JD007068.

Sanchez-Lorenzo, A., J. Calbó, J. Martin-Vide, A. Garcia-Manuel, G. García-Soriano, and C. Beck (2008), Winter ''weekend effect'' in southern Europe and its connections with periodicities in atmospheric dynamics, Geophys. Res. Lett., doi:10.1029/2008GL034160, in press.

Poster Session 1, Policy and Socio—Economic Research Poster Session
Monday, 12 January 2009, 2:30 PM-4:00 PM, Hall 5

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