Explainer-What is behind the heat waves affecting the United States?
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[July 25, 2022]
By Daniel Trotta
(Reuters) - Virtually all the contiguous
United States experienced above normal temperatures in the past week,
with more dangerously hot weather forecast.
The U.S. heat wave followed record heat that killed hundreds if not
thousands of people and sparked wildfires in Europe.
Following is an explanation of what is causing the heat waves, according
to scientists.
WHAT IS A HEAT WAVE?
A heat wave has no single scientific definition. Depending on the
climate of a region, it can be determined by a certain number of days
above a specific temperature or percentile of the norm.
ARCTIC WARMING AND JET STREAM MIGRATION
The Arctic is warming three to four times faster than the globe as a
whole, meaning there is ever less difference between northern
temperatures and those closer to the equator.
That is resulting in swings in the North Atlantic jet stream, which in
turn leads to extreme weather events like heat waves and floods,
according to Jennifer Francis, senior scientist at the Woodwell Climate
Research Center.
HEAT DOMES
Warmer oceans contribute to heat domes, which trap heat over large
geographical areas. This weekend the heat dome is stretching from the
southern plains of the Oklahoma/Arkansas area all the way to the eastern
seaboard, according to the U.S. Weather Prediction Center.
Scientists have found the main cause of heat domes is a strong change in
ocean temperatures from west to east in the tropical Pacific Ocean
during the preceding winter.
"As prevailing winds move the hot air east, the northern shifts of the
jet stream trap the air and move it toward land, where it sinks,
resulting in heat waves," the U.S. National Oceanic and Atmospheric
Administration says on its website.
EL NIÑO AND LA NIÑA
Every few years, the climate patterns known as El Niño and, less
frequently, La Niña occur. El Niño brings warm water from the equatorial
Pacific Ocean up to the western coast of North America, and La Niña
brings colder water.
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Vangie Jacobo wipes her face with a wet rag while working outside in
106 degree heat in Phoenix, Arizona, U.S. July 23, 2022.
REUTERS/Rebecca Noble
At present, La Niña is in effect. Because summer temperatures trend
lower during La Niña, climate scientists are concerned about what a
serious heat wave would look like during the next El Niño, when even
hotter summer weather could be expected.
HUMAN-INFLUENCED CLIMATE CHANGE
Climate change caused by the burning of fossil fuels is a global
phenomenon that is certainly playing a role in what the United
States is experiencing, scientists say.
"Climate change is making extreme and unprecedented heat events both
more intense and more common, pretty much universally throughout the
world," said Daniel Swain, climate scientist at UCLA.
"Heat waves are probably the most underestimated type of potential
disaster because they routinely kill a lot of people. And we just
don't hear about it because it doesn't kill them in, to put it
bluntly, sufficiently dramatic ways. There aren't bodies on the
street."
Francis, of the Woodwell Center, said with climate change the world
is seeing changing wind patterns and weather systems "in ways that
make these heat waves, like we're seeing right now, more intense,
more persistent, and cover areas that just aren't used to having
heat waves."
Alex Ruane, researcher at NASA's Goddard Institute for Space
Studies, said as the world warms, "it takes less of a natural
anomaly to push us into the extreme heat categories. Because we're
closer to those thresholds, it's more likely that you'll get more
than one heat wave at the same time. We're seeing this in the United
States."
(Reporting by Daniel Trotta; Editing by Donna Bryson and Rosalba
O'Brien)
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