Non‐Monotonic Feedback Dependence Under Abrupt CO2 Forcing Due To a North Atlantic Pattern Effect

Author:

Mitevski Ivan1ORCID,Dong Yue23ORCID,Polvani Lorenzo M.12ORCID,Rugenstein Maria4ORCID,Orbe Clara15ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Applied Physics and Applied Mathematics Columbia University New York NY USA

2. Lamont‐Doherty Earth Observatory Columbia University Palisades NY USA

3. Cooperative Programs for the Advancement of Earth System Science University Corporation for Atmospheric Research Boulder CO USA

4. Department of Atmospheric Science Colorado State University Fort Collins CO USA

5. NASA Goddard Institute for Space Studies New York NY USA

Abstract

AbstractEffective climate sensitivity (EffCS), commonly estimated from model simulations with abrupt 4×CO2 for 150 years, has been shown to depend on the CO2 forcing level. To understand this dependency systematically, we performed a series of simulations with a range of abrupt CO2 forcing in two climate models. Our results indicate that normalized EffCS values in these simulations are a non‐monotonic function of the CO2 forcing, decreasing between 3× and 4×CO2 in CESM1‐LE (2× and 3×CO2 in GISS‐E2.1‐G) and increasing at higher CO2 levels. The minimum EffCS value, caused by anomalously negative radiative feedbacks, arises mainly from sea‐surface temperature (SST) relative cooling in the tropical and subtropical North Atlantic. This cooling is associated with the formation of the North Atlantic Warming Hole and Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation collapse under CO2 forcing. Our findings imply that understanding changes in North Atlantic SST patterns is important for constraining near‐future and equilibrium global warming.

Funder

National Aeronautics and Space Administration

University Corporation for Atmospheric Research

National Science Foundation

Publisher

American Geophysical Union (AGU)

Subject

General Earth and Planetary Sciences,Geophysics

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