contributor author | Thompson, David W. J. | |
contributor author | Ceppi, Paulo | |
contributor author | Li, Ying | |
date accessioned | 2019-09-22T09:04:27Z | |
date available | 2019-09-22T09:04:27Z | |
date copyright | 10/31/2018 12:00:00 AM | |
date issued | 2018 | |
identifier other | JCLI-D-18-0339.1.pdf | |
identifier uri | http://yetl.yabesh.ir/yetl1/handle/yetl/4262762 | |
description abstract | In a recent study, the authors hypothesize that the Clausius?Clapeyron relation provides a strong constraint on the temperature of the extratropical tropopause and hence the depth of mixing by extratropical eddies. The hypothesis is a generalization of the fixed-anvil temperature hypothesis to the global atmospheric circulation. It posits that the depth of robust mixing by extratropical eddies is limited by radiative cooling by water vapor?and hence saturation vapor pressures?in areas of sinking motion. The hypothesis implies that 1) radiative cooling by water vapor constrains the vertical structure and amplitude of extratropical dynamics and 2) the extratropical tropopause should remain at roughly the same temperature and lift under global warming. Here the authors test the hypothesis in numerical simulations run on an aquaplanet general circulation model (GCM) and a coupled atmosphere?ocean GCM (AOGCM). The extratropical cloud-top height, wave driving, and lapse-rate tropopause all shift upward but remain at roughly the same temperature when the aquaplanet GCM is forced by uniform surface warming of +4 K and when the AOGCM is forced by RCP8.5 scenario emissions. ?Locking? simulations run on the aquaplanet GCM further reveal that 1) holding the water vapor concentrations input into the radiation code fixed while increasing surface temperatures strongly constrains the rise in the extratropical tropopause, whereas 2) increasing the water vapor concentrations input into the radiation code while holding surface temperatures fixed leads to robust rises in the extratropical tropopause. Together, the results suggest that roughly invariant extratropical tropopause temperatures constitutes an additional ?robust response? of the climate system to global warming. | |
publisher | American Meteorological Society | |
title | A Robust Constraint on the Temperature and Height of the Extratropical Tropopause | |
type | Journal Paper | |
journal volume | 32 | |
journal issue | 2 | |
journal title | Journal of Climate | |
identifier doi | 10.1175/JCLI-D-18-0339.1 | |
journal fristpage | 273 | |
journal lastpage | 287 | |
tree | Journal of Climate:;2018:;volume 032:;issue 002 | |
contenttype | Fulltext | |