Abstract
Spatial patterns of circulation variability over the Northern Hemisphere and their changes during the past 70 yr (1899–1969) are examined using eigenvector analyses of mean January and July sea-level pressure maps. The first several eigenvectors display variability associated with the major centers of action (the subpolar oceanic Lows, the subtropical oceanic Highs, the winter Siberian High, and the summer Asiatic Low). The pattern of the first eigenvector of January suggests that the intensity and latitudinal position of the major circulation features over the North Atlantic are associated with the intensity and position of the Aleutian Low over the North Pacific. The time series of the coefficients of the hemispheric eigenvectors are used to identify intervals of change in the hemispheric circulation associated with features on the scale of thc major centers of action. These time series provide a more general description of circulation change than that obtained from local or regional indices; b... Abstract Spatial patterns of circulation variability over the Northern Hemisphere and their changes during the past 70 yr (1899–1969) are examined using eigenvector analyses of mean January and July sea-level pressure maps. The first several eigenvectors display variability associated with the major centers of action (the subpolar oceanic Lows, the subtropical oceanic Highs, the winter Siberian High, and the summer Asiatic Low). The pattern of the first eigenvector of January suggests that the intensity and latitudinal position of the major circulation features over the North Atlantic are associated with the intensity and position of the Aleutian Low over the North Pacific. The time series of the coefficients of the hemispheric eigenvectors are used to identify intervals of change in the hemispheric circulation associated with features on the scale of thc major centers of action. These time series provide a more general description of circulation change than that obtained from local or regional indices; b...