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Towards a theoretical understanding of Arctic amplification dynamics

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/persons/resource/rostami

Rostami,  Masoud       
Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research;

/persons/resource/Fallah

Fallah,  Bijan H.       
Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research;

Fazel-Rastgar,  Farahnaz
External Organizations;

Hamidi,  Mehdi
External Organizations;

Hariri,  Saeed
External Organizations;

Guo,  Junxin
External Organizations;

Fu,  Li-Yun
External Organizations;

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Rostami, M., Fallah, B. H., Fazel-Rastgar, F., Hamidi, M., Hariri, S., Guo, J., Fu, L.-Y. (2026 online): Towards a theoretical understanding of Arctic amplification dynamics. - npj Climate and Atmospheric Science.
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41612-026-01439-z


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This paper develops a theoretical framework for understanding Arctic amplification through the lens of nonlinear potential vorticity (PV) dynamics, static stability feedbacks, and stratosphere–troposphere coupling. Using scaling arguments, Green’s function solutions, and a modified Eady model, we show how surface-warming-induced static stability perturbations modulate PV inversion efficiency and extend remote influences. We identify a critical threshold in the diabatic number D that marks the transition from a dry-nonlinear to a moist-nonlinear regime where diabatic PV generation outweighs baroclinic advection. A regime diagram constructed from the nonlinearity ratio R = |σ′/σ| (where σ is static stability) and D reveals four quadrants; the Arctic already resides in a nonlinear background (R > 0.3 for most CMIP6 models) and under continued warming it migrates vertically into the moist-nonlinear state via increasing D. Under SSP2-4.5, the ensemble mean D crosses the 0.03 threshold by mid-century (D = 0.031); under SSP5-8.5, D reaches 0.039 by end-century, with 88% of models exceeding the threshold. Reduced stability amplifies baroclinic growth rates and shifts most unstable modes toward high-latitude blocking wavelengths. Extending the framework to the stratosphere, we show that the refractive index for vertically propagating Rossby waves decreases with weakened zonal winds, a robust signal across models, enabling deeper wave penetration. Observational support from ERA5 reanalysis reveals a vertical contrast in PV anomalies – strong positive anomalies in the lower troposphere and a wave-like pattern aloft, consistent with the transition to diabatically driven dynamics. A positive feedback loop linking surface warming, reduced stability, enhanced inversion efficiency, amplified streamfunction anomalies, increased poleward heat transport, and strengthened vertical wave coupling suggests a loop gain that would be arrested by nonlinear saturation. These results establish polar amplification as arising from coupled interactions of static stability, PV dynamics, diabatic heating, and stratosphere-troposphere coupling, with direct implications for predicting midlatitude extreme weather events.