Tytuł pozycji:
Atmospheric circulation conditions during winter warm spells in Central Europe
The objective of the paper was to characterise the temporal and spatial variability of winter
warm spells in Central Europe in the years 1966/1967-2015/2016 and to determine the
circulation conditions of their occurrence. The applied data were obtained from the Polish
Institute of Meteorology and Water Management, Deutscher Wetterdienst and the National
Centre for Environmental Prediction/National Centre for Atmospheric Research. A warm
spell was defined as a sequence of at least three warm days, i.e. when the maximum air
temperature is higher than the 95th percentile of the probability density function designated
from observation. The research has proven that over the study period the air temperature
increased in the winter season in Central Europe and this translated into an increase
in the number of warm days. An average of 3-5 warm spells was recorded per 10 years.
The most numerous warm spells occurred during three winter seasons, i.e. 1989/1990,
2006/2007 and 2015/2016. The occurrence of warm spells was related to positive anomalies
of geopotential heights over the study area in the cross section of the entire troposphere.
Maximum anomalies appeared at 250 hPa geopotential height, and they developed
on average 9 days before the commencement of warm spells over the study area.