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Abstract The westward-propagating convectively coupled equatorial wave (CCEW) variability produced by an idealized general circulation model (GCM) is investigated. The model is a zonally symmetric aquaplanet with a slab ocean. Water vapor in the model may condense and produce latent heating, but there is no parameterization of cloud processes, only a quasi-equilibrium convection scheme. The CCEWs produced by the model are found to be sensitive to the heat capacity of the slab and the strength of surface friction. In spectral space, the westward-propagating precipitation variability in the model is dominated by sharp peaks in spectral power at zonal wavenumbers 5 and 6. These precipitation peaks are situated along the dispersion curve of the Rossby–Haurwitz waves, suggesting a connection between the global Rossby modes and precipitation variability. Composites of these disturbances reveal global circulation patterns that extend into the midlatitudes. The moisture variance budget of these disturbances shows that moisture advection by the global Rossby modes maintains the accompanying moisture signal. This is interpreted as downgradient advection of the background moisture gradient of the intertropical convergence zone. The locations of the precipitation peaks are sensitive to Doppler shifting by the zonal winds; when this Doppler shift becomes too weak, the frequencies of the global Rossby modes become too high to effectively couple to convection. A linearized primitive equation model shows that the presence of vertical shear in the background zonal winds is vital for producing a forced response that resembles the modes produced by the GCM. The forced response of the linear model is optimally located to enhance the original circulation of the global mode.more » « lessFree, publicly-accessible full text available February 1, 2026
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Zurita‐Gotor, Pablo; Held, Isaac M.; Merlis, Timothy M.; Chang, Chiung‐Yin; Hill, Spencer A.; MacDonald, Cameron G. (, Journal of Advances in Modeling Earth Systems)Abstract An idealized aquaplanet moist global atmospheric model with realistic radiative transfer but no clouds and no convective parameterization is found to possess multiple climate equilibria. When forced symmetrically about the equator, in some cases the Inter Tropical Convergence Zone (ITCZ) migrates to an off‐equatorial equilibrium position. Mechanism denial experiments prescribing relative humidity imply that radiation‐circulation coupling is essential to this instability. The cross‐equatorial asymmetry occurs only when the underlying slab ocean is sufficiently deep and the atmosphere's spectral dynamical core is sufficiently coarse (∼T170 or less with our control parameters). At higher resolutions, initializing with an asymmetric state indicates metastability with very slow (thousands of days) return to hemispheric symmetry. There is some sensitivity to the model timestep, which affects the time required to transition to the asymmetric state, with little effect on the equilibrium climate. The instability is enhanced when the planetary boundary layer scheme favors deeper layers or by a prescribed meridional heat transport away from the equator within the slab. The instability is not present when the model is run with a convective parameterization scheme commonly utilized in idealized moist models. We argue that the instability occurs when the asymmetric heating associated with a spontaneous ITCZ shift drives a circulation that rises poleward of the perturbed ITCZ. These results serve as a warning of the potential for instability and non‐uniqueness of climate that may complicate studies with idealized models of the tropical response to perturbations in forcing.more » « less
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