Lagged Responses of the Tropical Pacific to the 11-yr Solar Cycle Forcing and Possible Mechanisms
Autor: | Liang Zhao, Xin Wang, Ziniu Xiao, Wen-Juan Huo |
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Rok vydání: | 2021 |
Předmět: |
0303 health sciences
010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciences Subsidence (atmosphere) Westerlies Forcing (mathematics) Solar maximum 01 natural sciences Solar cycle 03 medical and health sciences Sea surface temperature 13. Climate action Climatology Shortwave radiation Thermocline Geology 030304 developmental biology 0105 earth and related environmental sciences |
Zdroj: | Journal of Meteorological Research. 35:444-459 |
ISSN: | 2198-0934 2095-6037 |
Popis: | This paper uses two subsets of ensemble historical-Nat simulations and pi-Control simulations from CMIP5 as well as observational/reanalysis datasets to investigate responses of the tropical Pacific to the 11-yr solar cycle. A statistically significant 11-yr solar signal is found in the upper-ocean layers above the thermocline and tropospheric circulations. A warming response initially appears in the upper layers of the central equatorial Pacific in the solar maximum years in observations, then increases and shifts into the eastern Pacific at lagged 1–3 yr. Meanwhile, an anomalous updraft arises over the western equatorial Pacific and shifts eastwards in the following years with anomalous subsidence over the Maritime Continent. These lagged responses are confirmed by the historical-Nat simulations, except that the initial signal is located more to the west and all the responses are weaker than the observed. A simplified mixed-layer heat budget analysis based on the historical-Nat simulations suggests that the atmospheric forcing, especially the shortwave radiation, is the major contributor to the initial warming response, and the ocean heat transport effect is responsible for the eastward displacement of the lagged warming responses. In the solar maximum years, the zonal ocean temperature gradient in the western–central Pacific is reduced by the initial warming, and anomalous westerly winds appear over the western equatorial Pacific and extend into the eastern Pacific during the lagged years. These anomalous westerly winds reduce the wind-driven ocean dynamical transport, resulting in the initial warming in the central equatorial Pacific being amplified and the surface warming shifting eastward during the lagged 1–3 yr. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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