Portada: Infraestructura para la Logística Sustentable 2050
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Infraestructura para el desarrollo que queremos 2026-2030

Elaborado por el Consejo de Políticas de Infraestructura (CPI), este documento constituye una hoja de ruta estratégica para orientar la inversión y la gestión de infraestructura en Chile. Presenta propuestas organizadas en siete ejes estratégicos, sin centrarse en proyectos específicos, sino en influir en las decisiones de política pública para promover una infraestructura que conecte territorios, genere oportunidades y eleve la calidad de vida de la población.
ARTÍCULO
TITULO

Revisiting the Influence of ENSO on the Arctic Stratosphere in CMIP5 and CMIP6 Models

Jinggao Hu    
Yifan Shen    
Jiechun Deng    
Yanpei Jia    
Zixu Wang and Anqi Li    

Resumen

The Arctic stratospheric response to El Niño?Southern Oscillation (ENSO) is assessed using the historical simulations provided by the Coupled Model Intercomparison Project Phases 5 and 6 (CMIP5 and CMIP6, respectively). CMIP6 models can well reproduce the ENSO signals in the Arctic stratosphere and have an ameliorated performance compared to CMIP5 models. Specifically, El Niño is associated with an intensified Pacific?North American pattern that leads to a considerable enhancement of planetary wavenumber 1 but a small reduction of planetary wavenumber 2, and thus, a warm and weakened stratospheric polar vortex. The case for La Niña is nearly the opposite, with a cool and strengthened stratospheric polar vortex. In CMIP6, the ENSO-related stratospheric signal matures in the February?March?April season and increases with ENSO magnitude, regardless of the ENSO phase. However, the stratospheric response to strong El Niño (La Niña) is weaker (stronger) than that which should be achieved if the response changes linearly with the amplitude of El Niño (La Niña). An asymmetric time evolution of stratospheric signals exists between strong El Niño and La Niña events. The stratospheric response caused by strong El Niño is weaker from late winter to early spring but stronger in middle and late spring compared to that caused by strong La Niña. By contrast, the Arctic stratospheric signal in moderate El Niño events is larger than that in moderate La Niña. Compared to ENSO-neutral winters, stratospheric sudden warming occurs more (less) frequently in El Niño (La Niña), as simulated by CMIP6 high-top models.

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