Robust Anthropogenic Signal Identified in the Seasonal Cycle of Tropospheric Temperature

Author:

Santer Benjamin D.12,Po-Chedley Stephen1,Feldl Nicole3,Fyfe John C.4,Fu Qiang5,Solomon Susan6,England Mark3,Rodgers Keith B.78,Stuecker Malte F.9,Mears Carl10,Zou Cheng-Zhi11,Bonfils Céline J. W.1,Pallotta Giuliana1,Zelinka Mark D.1,Rosenbloom Nan12,Edwards Jim12

Affiliation:

1. a Program for Climate Model Diagnosis and Intercomparison, Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory, Livermore, California

2. b Joint Institute for Regional Earth System Science and Engineering, University of California at Los Angeles, Los Angeles, California

3. c Department of Earth and Planetary Sciences, University of California at Santa Cruz, Santa Cruz, California

4. d Canadian Centre for Climate Modelling and Analysis, Environment and Climate Change Canada, Victoria, British Columbia, Canada

5. e Department of Atmospheric Sciences, University of Washington, Seattle, Washington

6. f Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Earth, Atmospheric, and Planetary Sciences, Cambridge, Massachusetts

7. g Center for Climate Physics, Institute for Basic Science, Busan, South Korea

8. h Pusan National University, Busan, South Korea

9. i Department of Oceanography and International Pacific Research Center, School of Ocean and Earth Science and Technology, University of Hawai‘i at Mānoa, Honolulu, Hawaii

10. j Remote Sensing Systems, Santa Rosa, California

11. k Center for Satellite Applications and Research, NOAA/NESDIS, Camp Springs, Maryland

12. l National Center for Atmospheric Research, Boulder, Colorado

Abstract

Abstract Previous work identified an anthropogenic fingerprint pattern in TAC(x, t), the amplitude of the seasonal cycle of mid- to upper-tropospheric temperature (TMT), but did not explicitly consider whether fingerprint identification in satellite TAC(x, t) data could have been influenced by real-world multidecadal internal variability (MIV). We address this question here using large ensembles (LEs) performed with five climate models. LEs provide many different sequences of internal variability noise superimposed on an underlying forced signal. Despite differences in historical external forcings, climate sensitivity, and MIV properties of the five models, their TAC(x, t) fingerprints are similar and statistically identifiable in 239 of the 240 LE realizations of historical climate change. Comparing simulated and observed variability spectra reveals that consistent fingerprint identification is unlikely to be biased by model underestimates of observed MIV. Even in the presence of large (factor of 3–4) intermodel and inter-realization differences in the amplitude of MIV, the anthropogenic fingerprints of seasonal cycle changes are robustly identifiable in models and satellite data. This is primarily due to the fact that the distinctive, global-scale fingerprint patterns are spatially dissimilar to the smaller-scale patterns of internal TAC(x, t) variability associated with the Atlantic multidecadal oscillation and El Niño–Southern Oscillation. The robustness of the seasonal cycle detection and attribution results shown here, taken together with the evidence from idealized aquaplanet simulations, suggest that basic physical processes are dictating a common pattern of forced TAC(x, t) changes in observations and in the five LEs. The key processes involved include GHG-induced expansion of the tropics, lapse-rate changes, land surface drying, and sea ice decrease.

Publisher

American Meteorological Society

Subject

Atmospheric Science

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