Assessment of responses of North Atlantic winter sea surface temperature to the North Atlantic Oscillation on an interannual scale in 13 CMIP5 models
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Published:2020-12-11
Issue:6
Volume:16
Page:1509-1527
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ISSN:1812-0792
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Container-title:Ocean Science
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language:en
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Short-container-title:Ocean Sci.
Author:
Jing Yujie,Li Yangchun,Xu Yongfu
Abstract
Abstract. This study evaluates the response of winter-average sea surface
temperature (SST) to the winter North Atlantic Oscillation (NAO) simulated
by 13 Coupled Model Intercomparison Project Phase 5 (CMIP5) Earth system models in the North Atlantic (NA) (0–65∘ N) on an interannual scale. Most of the models can reproduce an observed
tripolar pattern of the response of the SST anomalies to the NAO on an
interannual scale. The model bias is mainly reflected in the locations of
the negative-response centers in the subpolar NA (45–65∘ N), which
is mainly caused by the bias of the response of the SST anomalies to the
NAO-driven turbulent heat flux (THF) anomalies. Although the influence of
the sensible heat flux (SHF) on the SST is similar to that of the latent heat flux (LHF), it seems that the SHF may play a larger role in the response of
the SST to the NAO, and the weak negative response of the SST anomalies to
the NAO-driven LHF anomalies is mainly caused by the overestimated oceanic
role in the interaction of the LHF and SST. Besides the THF, some other
factors which may impact the relationship of the NAO and SST are discussed.
The relationship of the NAO and SST is basically not affected by the heat
meridional advection transports on an interannual timescale, but it may be
influenced by the cutoffs of data filtering, the initial fields, and
external-forcing data in some individual models, and in the tropical NA it
can also be affected by the different definitions of the NAO indices.
Publisher
Copernicus GmbH
Subject
Cell Biology,Developmental Biology,Embryology,Anatomy
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