Houston Chronicle Sunday

How drought and climate change make heat domes worse

- By Jason Samenow, Artur Galocha and Diana Leonard

Record-breaking heat waves have roasted the Western United States several times already this summer.

At the heart of these waves are “heat domes,” sprawling zones of strong high pressure, beneath which the air is compressed and heats up. They are a staple of summertime and the source of most heat waves.

Here’s how they work.

Hot air masses, born from the blazing summer sun, expand vertically into the atmosphere, creating a dome of high pressure that diverts weather systems around them.

As high-pressure systems become firmly establishe­d, subsiding air beneath them heats the atmosphere

and dissipates cloud cover.

The high summer sun angle combined with those cloudless skies then further heat the ground.

But amid drought conditions, the vicious feedback loop doesn’t end there.

The combinatio­n of heat and a parched landscape can work to make a heat wave even more extreme. With very little moisture in soils, heat energy that would normally be used on evaporatio­n — a cooling process — instead directly heats the air and the ground.

Jane Wilson Baldwin, a postdoctor­al researcher at the Lamont-Doherty Earth Observator­y at Columbia University, said that given the severe drought in the West right now, many feedbacks between the land and the atmosphere are combining to make heat domes worse.

“When the land surface is drier, it can’t cool itself through evaporatio­n, which makes the surface even hotter, which strengthen­s the blocking high (heat dome) further,” she said in an interview.

The situation is intensifie­d by increasing background temperatur­es due to the burning of fossil fuels.

“You would be hard-pressed to come up with a metric of heat waves that isn’t getting worse under global warming,” she said, adding that the increasing intensity and duration of heat waves is particular­ly clear.

One way to gauge the magnitude of a heat dome is to measure the height of the typical halfway point of the lower atmosphere — at the 500 millibar pressure level.

The higher this pressure level is, the hotter it is, because hot air is less dense than cold air and expands the atmosphere vertically.

For this pressure level to stretch to heights of 19,685 feet is quite rare, but several of the heat domes this summer and in recent summers have come close to or eclipsed that threshold.

Evidence suggests climate change is increasing the frequency of heat domes this intense, pumping them up higher into the atmosphere, not unlike adding more air to a hot-air balloon.

 ?? Washington Post ?? As the ground warms, it loses moisture, which makes it easier to heat even more.
Washington Post As the ground warms, it loses moisture, which makes it easier to heat even more.
 ??  ?? The dome of high pressure diverts clouds around them.
The dome of high pressure diverts clouds around them.

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