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contributor authorMeehl, Gerald A.
contributor authorBranstator, Grant W.
contributor authorWashington, Warren M.
date accessioned2017-06-09T15:17:32Z
date available2017-06-09T15:17:32Z
date copyright1993/01/01
date issued1993
identifier issn0894-8755
identifier otherams-3960.pdf
identifier urihttp://onlinelibrary.yabesh.ir/handle/yetl/4177956
description abstractIn this paper, an attempt is made to estimate possible sensitivities of El Niño-Southern Oscillation (ENSO)-related effects in a climate with increased carbon dioxide (CO2). To illustrate this sensitivity, results are shown from two different interactive ocean-atmosphere model configurations and an atmospheric model with prescribed heating anomalies. In the first, an atmospheric general circulation model (GCM) is coupled to a global coarse-grid dynamical ocean GCM (coupled model). In the second, the same atmospheric model is coupled to a simple nondynamic slab-ocean mixed-layer model (mixed-layer model). In the third, an atmospheric model is run in perpetual January mode with observed sea surface temperatures (SSTs) and prescribed tropical tropospheric heating anomalies (prescribed-heating model). Results from the coupled model show that interannual SST variability (with warm and cold events relative to the mean SST) continues to occur in the tropics with a doubling of CO2. This variability is superimposed on mean SSTs in the tropical eastern Pacific that are higher by about 1°. The pattern of precipitation and soil-moisture anomalies in the tropics is similar in model warm events with present amounts of CO2 (1 ? CO2) and in warm events with instantaneously doubled CO2 (2 ? CO2). When a warm-event SST anomaly is superimposed, the rise in mean SST in the tropical eastern Pacific from the doubling of CO2 leads to increased evaporation and low-level moisture convergence, greater precipitation over the SST anomaly, and an intensification of atmospheric anomalies in the tropics involved with the anomalous large-scale east-west (Walker) circulation. Consequently, differences of precipitation and soil moisture between 1 ? CO2 and 2 ? CO2 warm events show that most anomalously dry areas become drier (implying risk of increased drought in those regions in 2 ? CO2 Warm events) and anomalously wet areas wetter in the coupled model. In the extratropics, the increased CO2 causes a large change in the midlatitude atmospheric circulation. This is associated with an alteration of extratropical teleconnections in 2 ? CO warm events compared to 1 ? CO2 warm events in a relative sense, with more zonally symmetric anomalies in sea level pressure and 200- mb height. Similar results in the tropics and extratropics are obtained for the mixed-layer model with warm-event SST anomalies in the tropical Pacific prescribed for 1 ? CO2 and 2 ? CO2 mean climates, and from the prescribed-heating model with anomalous heat sources in the tropical troposphere analogous to those in 1 ? CO2 and 2 ? CO2 warm events. This study is a precursor to future higher-resolution model studies that could also address possible changes in ENSO but with better representation of coupled mechanisms thought to contribute to ENSO.
publisherAmerican Meteorological Society
titleTropical Pacific Interannual Variability and CO2 Climate Change
typeJournal Paper
journal volume6
journal issue1
journal titleJournal of Climate
identifier doi10.1175/1520-0442(1993)006<0042:TPIVAC>2.0.CO;2
journal fristpage42
journal lastpage63
treeJournal of Climate:;1993:;volume( 006 ):;issue: 001
contenttypeFulltext


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