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contributor authorPanos J. Athanasiadis
contributor authorFumiaki Ogawa
contributor authorNour-Eddine Omrani
contributor authorNoel Keenlyside
contributor authorReinhard Schiemann
contributor authorAlexander J. Baker
contributor authorPier Luigi Vidale
contributor authorAlessio Bellucci
contributor authorPaolo Ruggieri
contributor authorRein Haarsma
contributor authorMalcolm Roberts
contributor authorChris Roberts
contributor authorLenka Novak
contributor authorSilvio Gualdi
date accessioned2023-04-12T18:41:21Z
date available2023-04-12T18:41:21Z
date copyright2022/10/14
date issued2022
identifier otherJCLI-D-21-0515.1.pdf
identifier urihttp://yetl.yabesh.ir/yetl1/handle/yetl/4290074
description abstractStarting to resolve the oceanic mesoscale in climate models is a step change in model fidelity. This study examines how certain obstinate biases in the midlatitude North Atlantic respond to increasing resolution (from 1° to 0.25° in the ocean) and how such biases in sea surface temperature (SST) affect the atmosphere. Using a multimodel ensemble of historical climate simulations run at different horizontal resolutions, it is shown that a severe cold SST bias in the central North Atlantic, common to many ocean models, is significantly reduced with increasing resolution. The associated bias in the time-mean meridional SST gradient is shown to relate to a positive bias in low-level baroclinicity, while the cold SST bias causes biases also in static stability and diabatic heating in the interior of the atmosphere. The changes in baroclinicity and diabatic heating brought by increasing resolution lead to improvements in European blocking and eddy-driven jet variability. Across the multimodel ensemble a clear relationship is found between the climatological meridional SST gradients in the broader Gulf Stream Extension area and two aspects of the atmospheric circulation: the frequency of high-latitude blocking and the southern-jet regime. This relationship is thought to reflect the two-way interaction (with a positive feedback) between the respective oceanic and atmospheric anomalies. These North Atlantic SST anomalies are shown to be important in forcing significant responses in the midlatitude atmospheric circulation, including jet variability and the storm track. Further increases in oceanic and atmospheric resolution are expected to lead to additional improvements in the representation of Euro-Atlantic climate.
publisherAmerican Meteorological Society
titleMitigating Climate Biases in the Midlatitude North Atlantic by Increasing Model Resolution: SST Gradients and Their Relation to Blocking and the Jet
typeJournal Paper
journal volume35
journal issue21
journal titleJournal of Climate
identifier doi10.1175/JCLI-D-21-0515.1
journal fristpage3385
journal lastpage3406
page3385–3406
treeJournal of Climate:;2022:;volume( 035 ):;issue: 021
contenttypeFulltext


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