Affiliation:
1. Department of Meteorology University of Reading Reading UK
2. Department of Meteorology National Centre for Atmospheric Science University of Reading Reading UK
Abstract
AbstractThe tropical arm of Atlantic Multidecadal Variability (AMV) influences climate worldwide, yet the mechanisms generating it remain unclear. Here, we examine experiments with sea surface temperature (SST)‐restoring in the extratropical North Atlantic in multiple models and use mixed‐layer heat budgets to elucidate the important mechanisms. Our results demonstrate that the tropical AMV is driven by wind‐mixed‐layer‐SST feedback. The evolution has two phases with tropical AMV SST anomalies growing from April to October and decaying from November to March. The amplitude of the growth phase surpasses that of the decay phase, resulting in overall tropical Atlantic warming during positive AMV phases. During summer, positive SST anomalies in the extratropics weaken the trade winds, resulting in a shallower mixed‐layer with reduced heat capacity. Subsequent absorption of climatological shortwave radiation in this shallower mixed‐layer then causes SSTs to warm, generating the tropical AMV. Importantly, anomalous surface heat‐fluxes make modest contributions to tropical AMV in these experiments.
Funder
Royal Society
Natural Environment Research Council
Publisher
American Geophysical Union (AGU)