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Atmospheric Circulation Sensitivity to Changes in the Vertical Structure of Polar Warming

Author(s)
Kim, DoyeonKang, Sarah M.Merlis, Timothy M.Shin, Yechul
Issued Date
2021-10
DOI
10.1029/2021GL094726
URI
https://scholarworks.unist.ac.kr/handle/201301/54825
Fulltext
https://agupubs.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1029/2021GL094726
Citation
GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH LETTERS, v.48, no.19, pp.e2021GL094
Abstract
This study examines the effects of the vertical structure of polar warming on the remote atmospheric circulation. We apply thermal forcing at different vertical levels in the Northern Hemisphere polar region in two atmospheric global climate models of different complexity, both coupled to an aquaplanet slab ocean. The efficacy of polar heating in perturbing the remote climate increases with the altitude at which it is applied. This robust sensitivity arises from the dominance of surface temperature contribution to the outgoing longwave radiation owing to the large emissivity of the polar troposphere. An upper-level polar heating has a smaller fraction of forcing balanced by radiative flux changes and a larger contribution from atmospheric energy transport changes, which provokes larger shifts in the extratropical jet and Hadley circulation. Our results suggest increasingly far-reaching impacts of Arctic warming as a less surface-trapped profile is projected for seasonally ice-free conditions in the near future.
Publisher
AMER GEOPHYSICAL UNION
ISSN
0094-8276
Keyword
SEA-ICECLIMATE FEEDBACKSMODELAMPLIFICATIONLATITUDEINVERSIONSURFACEGCM

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