Abstract The modern Arctic climate during wintertime is characterized by sea-ice cover, a strong surface temperature inversion, and the absence of convection. Correspondingly, the energy balance in the Arctic atmosphere today is dominated by atmospheric radiative cooling and advective heating, so-called radiative advective equilibrium. Climate change in the Arctic involves sea-ice melt, vanishing of the surface inversion, and emergence of convective precipitation. Here we show climate change in the Arctic involves the emergence of a new energy balance regime characterized by radiative cooling, convective heating, and advective heating, so-called radiative convective advective equilibrium. A time-dependent decomposition of the atmospheric energy balance shows the regime transition is associated with enhanced radiative cooling followed by decreased advective heating. The radiative cooling response consists of a robust clear-sky greenhouse effect and a transient cloud contribution that varies across models. Mechanism-denial experiments in an aquaplanet with and without interactive sea ice highlight the important role of sea-ice melt in both the radiative cooling and advective heating responses. The results show that climate change in the Arctic involves temporally evolving mechanisms, suggesting that an emergent constraint based on historical data or trends may not constrain the long-term response.
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Quantifying Energy Balance Regimes in the Modern Climate, Their Link to Lapse Rate Regimes, and Their Response to Warming
Abstract Energy balance and lapse rate regimes qualitatively characterize the low, middle, and high latitudes of Earth’s modern climate. Currently we do not have a complete quantitative understanding of the spatiotemporal structure of energy balance regimes [e.g., radiative convective equilibrium (RCE) and radiative advective equilibrium (RAE)] and their connection to lapse rate regimes (moist adiabat and surface inversion). Here we use the vertically integrated moist static energy budget to define a nondimensional number that quantifies where and when RCE and RAE are approximately satisfied in Earth’s modern climate. We find RCE exists year-round in the tropics and in the northern midlatitudes during summertime. RAE exists year-round over Antarctica and in the Arctic with the exception of early summer. We show that lapse rates in RCE and RAE are consistent with moist adiabatic and surface inversion lapse rates, respectively. We use idealized models (energy balance and aquaplanet) to test the following hypotheses: 1) RCE occurs during midlatitude summer for land-like (small heat capacity) surface conditions, and 2) sea ice is necessary for the existence of annual-mean RAE over a polar ocean, such as the Arctic. Consistent with point 1, an aquaplanet configured with a shallow mixed layer transitions to RCE in the midlatitudes during summertime whereas it does not for a deep mixed layer. Furthermore, we confirm point 2 using mechanism-denial aquaplanet experiments with and without thermodynamic sea ice. Finally, we show energy balance regimes of the modern climate provide a useful guide to the vertical structure of the warming response in the annual mean, and seasonally over the tropics and the southern high latitudes.
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- Award ID(s):
- 2033467
- PAR ID:
- 10391349
- Date Published:
- Journal Name:
- Journal of Climate
- Volume:
- 35
- Issue:
- 3
- ISSN:
- 0894-8755
- Page Range / eLocation ID:
- 1045 to 1061
- Format(s):
- Medium: X
- Sponsoring Org:
- National Science Foundation
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