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The analyses are based on data in boreal winter (December to February) over a 58-yr period (1958/59?2015/16). Specifically, we utilize the six-hourly Japanese 55-yr Reanalysis (JRA-55) with a spatial resolution of 1.25° latitude × 1.25° longitude (Kobayashi et al., 2015). JRA-55 is one of the more recent reanalyses with advanced data assimilation and model physical schemes, and it outperforms its predecessor in almost all aspects (Harada et al., 2016). The pressure-level product of JRA-55 has a high vertical resolution of 37 pressure levels with an interval of 25 hPa below 750 hPa, which thus depicts well the variables in the lower troposphere. An evaluation of four mainstream reanalysis datasets, including JRA-55, over East Asia showed that JRA-55 represents well the temperature and winds from the surface to the upper troposphere (Chen et al., 2014). Regarding the representation of CAM, JRA-55 has a good consistency with other reanalysis datasets (Kanno et al., 2016). It has also been applied to depict the fine structures and temporal evolutions of CAM during a specific cold-air outbreak (Yamaguchi et al., 2019).2
2.2. Definition of RCEs
To examine the detailed differences among RCEs in this study, we divide northern China into northwestern China (35°?50°N, 70°?100°E) and northeastern China (35°?50°N, 100°?130°E), as shown in Fig. 1a. The anomaly of surface air temperature averaged over these two subregions is estimated using JRA-55 and the climate-mean diurnal variation is removed. An RCE is identified when the regional-mean temperature anomaly exceeds ?4°C and lasts for at least one day, which is similar to the method used in Song and Wu (2017). This relative threshold of ?4°C exceeds one standard deviation of the regional-mean surface air temperature in both regions, so that highly anomalous events can be identified. As exemplified in Fig. 1b, the duration of an RCE is defined by the period with a temperature anomaly lower than ?4°C, while the intensity of an RCE is given as the anomaly of minimum temperature. For brevity, day 0 denotes the onset day of an RCE, and day ?1 (+1) denotes the first day before (after) the onset of an RCE, and so on.Figure1. (a) Topography over East Asia. The dashed rectangles denote northwestern China (35°?50°N, 70°?100°E) and northeastern China (35°?50°N, 100°?130°E). (b) Time series of the regional-mean surface air temperature anomaly in northwestern China during an RCE from 10 January to 11 February 2012.
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2.3. Isentropic analysis of CAM
Isentropic coordinates are convenient for tracing the air mass trajectory because potential temperature is conserved under adiabatic processes. To analyze the CAM activity during RCEs, we diagnose the CAM in an isentropic coordinate (Iwasaki et al., 2014). The CAM thickness is measured by the depth of pressure (DP), i.e., the difference between the surface pressure (ps) and the pressure at an isentropic surface of threshold potential temperatureFollowing Yamaguchi et al. (2019), the mean wind of CAM is defined as the CAM flux divided by the depth:
The tendency of CAM depth can be rewritten as below:
The convergence of CAM flux in Eq. (1) is thus divided into the first two terms on the right-hand side of Eq. (3), by which we can estimate the contributions of advection and convergence by the mean wind of CAM to the local change of CAM depth, respectively. The diabatic term of CAM [G(θT)] in Eq. (1) is estimated as a residual of the conservation relation. Overall, the isentropic analysis gives a quantitative diagnosis tool for CAM streams, which estimates the genesis/loss of CAM based on its conservation. This tool has been used to estimate the CAM depth and fluxes during cold surges, as well as their relationship to surface temperature (Shoji et al., 2014; Abdillah et al., 2018; Yamaguchi et al., 2019).
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3.1. RCE statistics
In this section, we describe the characteristics of RCEs in the western and eastern parts of northern China, from the aspects of occurrence frequency, duration and intensity. Figure 2a shows that 83 RCEs can be identified as having occurred in northwestern China during 1958?2015, with a frequency of 1.4 times per year. Among them, 47 events are in January, which account for 56.6% of the total events in winter. The second highest frequency of occurrence (22 events) appears in December, and the rest (14 events) appear in February. Comparatively, there are 153 RCEs in northeastern China, which is almost twice that in northwestern China. This indicates RCEs are relatively frequent in the eastern region, which is consistent with other studies (e.g., Gao et al., 2019). The occurrence frequency of RCEs in northeastern China is highest (57.5%) in January and lowest (14.3%) in February. The subseasonal variations of RCEs are thus similar in the two subregions, despite the difference in occurrence frequency. Such a temporal distribution of RCEs is consistent with the monthly variation in the intensity of winter monsoon in terms of surface temperature and sea level pressure (SLP), which maximize in January (Zhang et al., 1997; Zhuang et al., 2018).Figure2. Statistical characteristics of (a) occurrence number, (b) duration, and (c) intensity of the RCEs in the two subregions during 1958/59?2015/16. In (b) and (c), blue boxes denote the 25th and 75th percentile extents, red lines denote median, black crosses denote the mean value, black lines stand for the 10th and 90th percentiles, and red crosses show the values smaller (greater) than the 10th (90th) percentile.
The durations of RCEs in the two sub-regions are shown in Fig. 2b. In northwestern China, the average duration of RCEs is 6.8 days (black cross), while the median duration is 4.5 days (red bar), suggesting a distribution skewed to a long-duration range. Half of the RCEs can last for 2.5 to 8.0 days (blue box). Some RCEs exceeding the 90th percentile can last for more than 15 days (red cross marks). As for the RCEs in northeastern China, the average duration is 4.7 days, which is obviously shorter than that of the RCEs in northwestern China, with a 99% confidence level. Meanwhile, the difference between the average and median duration (1.5 days) is somewhat smaller than that of 2.3 days in northwestern China. Half of the RCEs in northeastern China last 2.0 to 5.5 days, suggesting that they are closely associated with short-period synoptic disturbances. The 90th-percentile RCEs last for about 10.5 days, which is shorter than in northwestern China (~15 days). It is thus concluded that most RCEs in northeastern China have a relatively short duration, while those in northwestern China last longer and vary across a relatively large range of duration.
Figure 2c shows the intensity of the RCEs, i.e., the anomaly of minimum surface temperature during the events. The RCEs in northwestern China have an average intensity of ?6.8°C (black cross) and a median intensity of ?6.5°C (red bar). Half of the RCEs have an intensity ranging from ?5.7°C to ?7.7°C (blue box). The extremely strong RCEs (90th percentile) have an anomaly of minimum temperature below ?8.6°C (red crosses at the bottom). In northeastern China, the average (median) intensity of RCEs is ?7.0°C (?6.7°C), which is similar to those in northwestern China. Half of the RCEs range from ?5.6°C to ?8.0°C (blue box). The extremely strong RCEs have an anomaly of minimum temperature below ?9.4°C. Therefore, RCEs seem to induce anomalies of minimum temperature at a comparable magnitude in the two regions, although they have large differences in occurrence and duration.
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3.2. Temporal evolution of RCEs and associated large-scale circulation
In this section, we first examine the temporal variations of composite RCEs. Figure 3a shows the variations of the regional mean surface temperature during the RCEs in northwestern China. The temperature begins to decrease at day ?4.5 and then drops to the minimum of ?5.7°C at day +1.25. The largest rate of change in temperature is estimated as ?1.9°C d?1 near the onset of RCEs. The regional mean temperature anomaly below ?4.0°C lasts till day +4.25. Comparatively, the RCEs in northeastern China are characterized by a decrease in surface temperature that begins at day ?2.5 (Fig. 3b), with a delay of two days compared to those in northwestern China. The minimum temperature anomaly (?5.6°C) occurs at day +1. Therefore, the decreasing temperature lasts for 3.5 days, which is much shorter than that of 5.75 days in northwestern China. The largest rate of change in temperature is as large as ?2.4°C d?1. The regional mean temperature anomaly below ?4.0°C lasts for 2.75 days, which is shorter than that in northwestern China. Therefore, we can see that RCEs in northwestern China are characterized by relatively long periods of temperature drop and cold anomalies, while those in northeastern China undergo a sharper drop of temperature and a shorter duration of cold anomalies. These results are analogous to those reported in previous studies (Qian and Zhang, 2007; Wang et al., 2017a).Figure3. Time series of the regional-mean temperature anomaly (black line) and its rate of change (red line) during RCEs in (a) northwestern and (b) northeastern China. (c, d) As in (a, b) but for the anomaly of CAM depth and its rate of change.
Figure 4 further shows the progress of the extent of temperature anomalies exceeding ?4°C. At day ?4 of the RCEs in northwestern China, the temperature anomaly originates in the Siberian region adjacent to northwestern China (Fig. 4a). From day ?4 to ?1, its boundary gradually extends to the north side of the Tianshan Mountains. The boundary of low temperature crosses the Tianshan?Altay area and reaches the north side of the Qinghai?Tibetan Plateau at day 0. The boundary then extends mainly southeastward to the Hexi Corridor and partly southwestward to the Tarim Basin. At day +2, low temperature influences almost the entire region of northwestern China, and its effects even extend to northeastern China. Here, we further show the center of the temperature anomaly (colored dots) and its pathway. From day ?4 to 0, the center moves southward to northwestern China. Then, it passes the valleys between the Tianshan and Altay mountains from day +1 to +2, and reaches the Hexi Corridor at day +4. The movement speed of the center is estimated and shown in Fig. 4c. The movement speed is 200?300 km d?1 from day ?4 to +1, and increases to 400?550 km d?1 after day +2. Such an acceleration of movement speed coincides with the passage of the Tianshan?Altay Mountains, as discussed in section 4.
Figure4. Temporal evolutions of the low-temperature zone (temperature anomaly lower than ?4°C) for RCEs in (a) northwestern and (b) northeastern China. Colored shading in (a) and (b) stands for the day when the temperature anomaly becomes lower than ?4°C for the first time. Colored dots denote the daily mean center of the low-temperature zone. Grey dashed contours mark the elevations of 2000 and 4000 m. Black dashed rectangles in (a) and (b) denote northwestern and northeastern China, respectively. (c, d) The movement speed of the low-temperature center in (c) northwestern and (d) northeastern China.
Figure 4b shows that the temperature anomaly associated with the RCEs in northeastern China originally occurs in the Siberian region at day ?4, which has a similar location to those events in northwestern China. From day ?4 to ?2, its boundary extends to Lake Baikal and the Tianshan Mountains. Different from the western boundary blocked by the Tianshan Mountains, the eastern boundary crosses the Mongolian Plateau and reaches northeastern China at day ?1. The low temperature anomaly dominates almost the whole of northeastern China at day 0, and its boundary can further influence central and southern China. From day ?4 to 0, the center of the temperature anomaly moves southeastward and reaches Lake Baikal, which indicates a pathway more to the east than that in northwestern China, despite the similar location of origin. After day 0, the center moves southward to the North China Plain at day +2. The movement speed of the low-temperature center is relatively slow (200?300 km d?1) at days ?4 and ?3 (Fig. 4d). However, the movement accelerates dramatically to a speed above 400 km d?1 after day ?2 and reaches its maximum (628 km d?1) at day +1. Therefore, the movement of the center of low temperature is much faster than that in northwestern China from day ?3 to +2 (Figs. 4c and d). This difference may be due to the effect of different orography along the pathways of the cold air. Overall, RCEs in northwestern China are characterized by relatively slow movement, while those in northeastern China have higher movement speeds.
Figure 5 shows the evolution of large-scale atmospheric conditions associated with RCEs. At day ?4 of the RCEs in northwestern China, a ridge at the 500-hPa geopotential height appears upstream of the Urals region around (60°N, 60°E) (Fig. 5a). The ridge is collocated with an anomaly of SLP, which is located to the west of the temperature anomaly. At day ?2, the 500-hPa ridge and SLP anomaly amplify with a slow eastward movement to the Urals region and a northeastward tilt to Siberia (Fig. 5b), indicating the development of a blocking pattern (e.g., Cheung et al., 2015). At the east of the ridge, the northwesterly wind is enhanced in the lower troposphere, which may lead to cold advection downstream to northwestern China. At the onset day of RCEs, the 500-hPa ridge and SLP anomaly reach their maxima near northwestern China (Fig. 5c). The southeastern boundary of the SLP anomaly coincides with that of the temperature anomaly. At day +2, the 500-hPa ridge weakens along with slow eastward movement. The boundaries of SLP and temperature anomalies arrive at the northern periphery of the Qinghai?Tibetan Plateau and move into the Hexi corridor (40°N, 115°E) (Fig. 5d). The boundaries thus seem to take around 5 days (from day ?2 to +2) passing northwestern China.
Figure5. Composite large-scale atmospheric conditions during RCEs in (a?d) northwestern and (e?h) northeastern China at days ?4, ?2, 0 and +2. Black contours denote the geopotential height at 500 hPa with intervals of 100 gpm, colored shading denotes the SLP anomaly, and the vectors stand for the wind at 850 hPa. Blue contours denote the surface temperature anomaly of ?4°C in the corresponding days. Black dashed rectangles in (a?d) and (e?h) denote northwestern and northeastern China, respectively. Black bold contours denote the elevations of 2000 and 4000 m.
As for the RCEs in northeastern China, the 500-hPa ridge and SLP anomaly move rapidly from the Urals region to Lake Baikal from day ?4 to 0 (Figs. 5e-g). At the onset day, the East Asian trough deepens obviously with a strengthened northwesterly wind over northeastern China (Fig. 5g). The boundaries of SLP and temperature anomalies pass rapidly through northeastern China. They further extend to southern China but weaken at day +2 (Fig. 5h). In contrast to the events in northwestern China, the 500-hPa ridge and SLP anomaly during RCEs in northeastern China show a much faster eastward movement. Given the strong connection between mid—lower tropospheric conditions and surface temperature, there is a need to analyze RCEs through estimating the dynamic/thermodynamic properties of cold-air activities in the troposphere.
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4.1. Spatiotemporal variations of CAM during RCEs
In this section, we describe the dynamic and thermodynamic properties of cold air quantitively using the isentropic analysis method as introduced in section 2. The cold-air activities are measured in terms of the depth and flux of CAM to explain the evolution of RCEs. Figure 3c shows the temporal variations of the CAM depth anomaly averaged in northwestern China. The CAM depth anomaly begins to increase from day ?5 and reaches a maximum of 65.8 hPa at day +0.5. The rate of increase in CAM depth has a maximum of 26.1 hPa d?1 at day ?0.75. The maxima of both CAM depth and its rate of change have a lead of ~0.5 d to those of the surface temperature anomaly. This phase shift is because the anomaly of potential temperature is tilted southeast with height (figure not shown). As for the RCEs in northeastern China (Fig. 3d), the CAM depth anomaly appears from day ?3 and its maximum (92.0 hPa) appears at day +0.5. The maximum rate of increase in CAM depth is estimated as 46.0 hPa d?1. The CAM depth in northeastern China thus seems to increase much faster than that in northwestern China (c.f., Figs. 3c and d). This difference in the rate of change in CAM depth corresponds well to the faster decrease in surface temperature in northeastern China than in northwestern China (c.f., Figs. 3a and b). Also of note is that the period with increasing CAM depth is about 3 d in northeastern China and 5.25 d in northwestern China, which also coincides with the different length of cooling period in the two sub-regions.Figure 6 further shows the spatial patterns of CAM depth and flux during the RCEs. At day ?4 of the RCEs in northwestern China, the anomaly of CAM depth appears in western Siberia (Fig. 6a). The CAM flux shows an anomalous cyclone (marked “C”) in western Siberia where CAM depth is accumulated. At day ?2, an anticyclonic anomaly of CAM flux (marked “A”) is established in the Urals region and forms a dipole pattern with the cyclone in western Siberia (Fig. 6b), which may relate to the development of the blocking pattern at 500 hPa (Fig. 5b). This dipole pattern induces the anomalous northeasterly flux of CAM at high latitudes (50°?70°N). The anomalous flux turns northwesterly and guides the CAM to northwestern China. Thus, the anomaly of CAM depth intensifies in strength and enlarges in area, which coincides with the extended area of the temperature anomaly. At day 0, the anomaly of CAM depth dominates the Tianshan?Altay region, with its boundary reaching the northern periphery of the Qinghai?Tibetan Plateau (Fig. 6c). Both the anomalies of CAM depth and flux have a local maximum in the valleys between the Tianshan and Altay mountain ranges, implying a channel for CAM movement. In the following days, one part of the CAM moves westward into the Tarim Basin, while the major part moves to the Hexi Corridor and Mongolian Plateau with an enhanced southeastward flux at the head of the CAM depth anomaly (Fig. 6d). The anomaly of CAM depth extends to its largest range and corresponds to the mature stage of RCEs.
Figure6. Spatiotemporal evolution of the CAM anomaly for RCEs in (a?d) northwestern and (e?h) northeastern China. Colored shading denotes the anomaly of CAM depth. Vectors denote the anomaly of CAM flux. Red lines (dots) indicate the trajectories (centers) of the CAM depth anomaly. Black dashed rectangles in (a?d) and (e?h) denote northwestern and northeastern China, respectively. Black contours mark the elevations of 2000 and 4000 m. Red contours denote the surface temperature anomaly of ?4°C in the corresponding days. Red rectangles in (d) and (h) mark the propagation route of CAM and low temperature for making Fig. 8. The “A” and “C” in the figures denote the centers of the anticyclonic and cyclonic CAM flux, respectively.
Also of note is that there is a spatial shift between the CAM depth anomaly (Figs. 6a-d) and the SLP anomaly (Figs. 5a-d). The anomalous center of CAM depth is generally located to the east of the SLP anomaly, where the northerly winds and resultant cold advection prevail. A similar shift between SLP and surface temperature has also been reported in previous studies (Peng and Bueh, 2012; Cheung et al., 2015; Song and Wu, 2017). Further, we can see that the anomalous center of CAM depth is displaced southeast of the surface temperature anomaly during the RCEs (Figs. 6a-d). Such a spatial shift actually shows that the anomaly of potential temperature is tilted southeast with height (figure not shown). This shift also explains the maximum CAM depth having a lead time of 0.5 d before the lowest surface temperature (Figs. 3a and c).
During the RCEs in northeastern China, the anomaly of CAM depth originates north of the Altay Mountains at day ?4 (Fig. 6e). The anomalous CAM flux shows the dipole pattern with an anticyclone and a cyclone over western Siberia. The centers of the CAM depth anomaly and the dipole of CAM flux are located ~20° east of those in Fig. 6a. At day ?2, the CAM depth anomaly dominates the Mongolian Plateau, centered at Lake Baikal. The dipole of CAM flux also moves rapidly eastward, which leads to the strong northwesterly flux near the center of CAM depth over the Mongolian Plateau (Fig. 6f). At day 0, the anomaly of CAM depth and strong northwesterly flux of CAM dominate northeastern China, which correspond to the onset of the temperature anomaly (Fig. 6g). In the following days, the anomalies of CAM depth and flux reach southern China, the East China Sea and the Sea of Japan, where they begin to dissipate (Fig. 6h). The track of the CAM depth anomaly can be defined by the centers of the highest 1% of CAM depth within (20°?70°N, 40°?160°E) (dots in Fig. 6h). This track shows the anomaly of CAM depth moves from the north of the Altay Mountains to Lake Baikal, and finally reaches the North China Plain, which coincides well with the movement of the temperature anomaly in Fig. 4b. The southeastward movement of CAM depth seems to be guided by the anomalous northerly CAM flux between the dipole pattern, which agrees with the case study of Yamaguchi et al. (2019) carried out for a record-breaking RCE in East Asia.
Comparing the RCEs in northwestern and northeastern China (Fig. 6), one important feature is the difference in the location and movement of the CAM depth anomaly. Figure 7 further shows the movement speed of the CAM depth anomaly, estimated by its moving centers (red dots in Figs. 6d and h). During the events of northwestern China, the movement speed of the center is relatively slow before day +1, with a range of 280?600 km d?1. It increases dramatically to about 900 km d?1 at days +2 and +3, when the center passes the Tianshan?Altay Mountain regions (Fig. 6d). A longitude?time diagram of CAM and temperature, which is calculated by the zonal-mean variables in the red parallelogram in Figs. 6d and h, also confirms the change in the movement speed of the CAM depth anomaly after passing the Tianshan?Altay Mountains (Fig. 8a). This feature of CAM movement corresponds well to that of the temperature anomaly (Fig. 8b). These results suggest that the orographic effect plays an important role in regulating the movement of CAM, thereby affecting the evolution of the temperature anomaly during RCEs in northwestern China.
Figure7. Movement speed of the center of the CAM depth anomaly derived from the red dots in Fig. 6. The blue and red lines denote the values during the RCEs in northwestern and northeastern China, respectively.
Figure8. Longitude?time diagrams of anomalies of (a) CAM depth and (b) surface temperature averaged over the red parallelogram in Fig. 6d during RCEs in northwestern China. (c, d) As in (a, b) but for RCEs in northeastern China. The red lines in (a) and (b) denote the position of the Altay Mountains.
As for the RCEs in northeastern China, the center of the CAM depth anomaly remains at a movement speed of 500?700 km d?1 from day ?3 to +1, which is much faster than that in the northwestern China events (Fig. 7). From day +2, the movement speed of the center for the RCEs in northeastern China begins to decrease because of the dissipation of CAM over the ocean surface (Fig. 6h). Figure 8c also shows that the CAM depth anomaly tends to move at a steady speed of ~700 km d?1 from day ?2 to +2 as it moves across the Mongolian Plateau, which corresponds to that of the temperature anomaly in Fig. 8d. It seems that the orographic effect on CAM is not so evident for RCEs in northeastern China, compared to that in northwestern China. Therefore, the fast movement of CAM in northeastern China likely explains the rapid drop in temperature. Comparatively, the relatively slow movement of CAM in northwestern China owing to orographic effects may account for the moderate drop in temperature but relatively long-lasting temperature anomaly.
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4.2. CAM anomalies associated with the intensity and duration of RCEs
The intensity and duration of low temperature vary largely among the RCEs, as shown in Figs. 2b and c, which may be closely associated with the variations in CAM. To clarify this linkage, we estimate the regression patterns of CAM depth/flux onto the intensity of RCEs (Fig. 9). The patterns present the departure of CAM depth/flux from the events’ average in Fig. 6 with respect to the enhancement of RCE intensity by 1°C. Figures 9a and b show that, at days ?4 and ?2, there are positive departures of CAM depth and northeasterly flux over Siberia (50°?70°N, 60°?110°E). The increased accumulation of CAM depth thus favors the subsequent intensification of the RCEs in northwestern China. At day 0, the enhancement of CAM depth occurs in the Tianshan?Altay region (Fig. 9c), which overlaps with the anomaly of CAM depth shown in Fig. 6c. Over there, an additional increase in CAM depth by ~40 hPa, which is comparable to 30% of the composite anomaly in Fig. 6c, corresponds to a decrease in minimum temperature by 1°C. The departure of CAM flux also suggests a strengthened anticyclonic pattern over Siberia in Fig. 6c. At day +2, when the anomaly of CAM depth has moved southeastward to the downstream region (Fig. 6d), the departure of CAM depth in northwestern China caused by its stagnation usually corresponds to the strong RCEs (Fig. 9d). The maintenance of CAM depth in northwestern China, particularly after the onset of RCEs, also regulates the duration of low temperature (figures not shown). It is concluded that the enhanced accumulation of CAM depth near northwestern China and the strengthened anticyclonic CAM flux over Siberia are favorable for the occurrence of strong and long-lasting RCEs.Figure9. Regression patterns of CAM depth (colored shading) and flux (vectors) onto the intensity of RCEs in (a?d) northwestern and (e?h) northeastern China. Black dashed rectangles in (a?d) and (e?h) denote northwestern and northeastern China, respectively. Black contours mark the elevations of 2000 and 4000 m. Red contours (red vectors) denote the shading (vectors) exceeding the 95% statistical confidence level. The regression coefficients are shown to an enhanced intensity of RCEs (anomaly of minimum temperature) by ?1°C.
As for the RCEs in northeastern China, the departure of CAM depth over Siberia at day ?4 has a weak relationship with the intensity of RCEs (Fig. 9e). At day ?2, a positive departure of CAM depth of ~20 hPa appears over Siberia (Fig. 9f). It then moves to Lake Baikal and increases to ~30 hPa at day 0 (Fig. 9g). In the following days, the enhanced CAM depth in northeastern China corresponds to the anomalously low minimum temperature (Fig. 9h). The departure of CAM depth in Figs. 9f-h is usually located to the northwest of the CAM center, shown in Figs. 6f-h, and a similar pattern of CAM depth departure is also observed in prolonged RCEs (figures not shown). This distribution of CAM depth departure indicates that the stronger and longer-duration RCEs tend to have a larger spatial extent of the CAM depth anomaly and a greater supply of CAM in upstream areas. We also note the departure of CAM depth in the Sea of Okhotsk at days ?4 and ?2 (Figs. 9e-f). It seems that some parts of the CAM affecting northeastern China may originate from there during strong RCEs, as also noted in the case study of Yamaguchi et al. (2019). Overall, the CAM depth and flux are closely associated with the evolution of RCEs (section 4.1), and their variations among RCEs also regulate the intensity and duration of low temperature (section 4.2).