The Hadley circulation in a changing climate

Author:

Lionello Piero1ORCID,D'Agostino Roberta23,Ferreira David4,Nguyen Hanh5,Singh Martin S.6

Affiliation:

1. DiSTeBA ‐ Dipartimento di Scienze e Tecnologie Biologiche e Ambientali University of Salento Lecce Italy

2. Max‐Planck‐Institut für Meteorologie Hamburg Germany

3. National Research Council Institute of Atmospheric Sciences and Climate Lecce Italy

4. Department of Meteorology University of Reading Reading UK

5. Bureau of Meteorology Melbourne Victoria Australia

6. School of Earth, Atmosphere, and Environment Monash University Melbourne Victoria Australia

Abstract

AbstractThe Hadley circulation (HC) is a global‐scale atmospheric feature with air descending in the subtropics and ascending in the tropics, which plays a fundamental role in Earth's climate because it transports energy polewards and moisture equatorwards. Theoretically, as a consequence of anthropogenic climate change, the HC is expected to expand polewards, while indications on the HC strength are equivocal, as weakening and strengthening are expected in response to different mechanisms. In fact, there is a general agreement among reanalyses and climate simulations that the HC has significantly widened in the last four decades and it will continue widening in the future, but there is no consensus on past and future changes of the HC strength. Substantial uncertainties are produced by the effects of natural variability, structural deficiencies in climate models and reanalyses, and the influence of other forcing factors, such as anthropogenic aerosols, black carbon, and stratospheric and tropospheric ozone. The global HC can be decomposed into three regional HCs, associated with ascending motion above Equatorial Africa, the Maritime Continent, and Equatorial America, which have evolved differently during the last decades. Climate projections suggest a generalized expansion in the Southern Hemisphere, but a complex regional expansion/contraction pattern in the Northern Hemisphere.

Funder

Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft

Australian Research Council

Publisher

Wiley

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