Weather regimes linked to daily precipitation anomalies in Northern Chile
\'O. Meseguer-Ruiz, N. Cortesi, J. A. Guijarro, P. Sarricolea

TL;DR
This study classifies weather regimes in Northern Chile to understand their influence on precipitation anomalies and assess their potential for rainfall predictability, revealing significant trends linked to climate variability.
Contribution
It identifies four main weather regimes affecting precipitation in Northern Chile and analyzes their trends and influence on rainfall anomalies, enhancing understanding of regional climate variability.
Findings
Four main weather regimes describe atmospheric circulation.
Precipitation anomalies are linked to specific regimes and air mass origins.
Significant trends in regime persistence and frequency relate to regional droughts.
Abstract
Northern Chile is one of the most arid regions in the world, with precipitation mainly occurring during austral summer, between December and April 1966-2015. The aim of this study is to classify the main weather regimes derived from sea level pressure, surface wind speed, 500 or 250 hPa geopotential heights, in order to measure their influence on precipitation anomalies and determine if they can be considered sources of predictability of rainfall in this region. Four weather regimes were found to optimally describe atmospheric circulation in the study area and for each of the four levels described above. Using daily precipitation data from a network of 161 meteorological stations across the region, the rainfall anomalies associated with each weather regime were quantified. They are coherent with the direction of flow derived from pressure and geopotential anomalies, bringing humid air…
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