The Effect of Atmosphere‐Ocean Coupling on the Sensitivity of the ITCZ to Convective Mixing

Abstract The Intertropical Convergence Zone (ITCZ) is a discontinuous, zonal precipitation band that plays a crucial role in the global hydrological cycle. Previous studies using prescribed sea surface temperature (SST) aquaplanets show the ITCZ is sensitive to convective mixing, but such a framewor...

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Main Authors: J. Talib, S. J. Woolnough, N. P. Klingaman, C. E. Holloway
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: American Geophysical Union (AGU) 2020-12-01
Series:Journal of Advances in Modeling Earth Systems
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1029/2020MS002322
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spelling doaj-e24e3ad08677420d8af9427ab1eb2cd22021-02-10T19:50:18ZengAmerican Geophysical Union (AGU)Journal of Advances in Modeling Earth Systems1942-24662020-12-011212n/an/a10.1029/2020MS002322The Effect of Atmosphere‐Ocean Coupling on the Sensitivity of the ITCZ to Convective MixingJ. Talib0S. J. Woolnough1N. P. Klingaman2C. E. Holloway3Department of Meteorology University of Reading Reading UKNational Centre for Atmospheric Science‐Climate Reading UKNational Centre for Atmospheric Science‐Climate Reading UKDepartment of Meteorology University of Reading Reading UKAbstract The Intertropical Convergence Zone (ITCZ) is a discontinuous, zonal precipitation band that plays a crucial role in the global hydrological cycle. Previous studies using prescribed sea surface temperature (SST) aquaplanets show the ITCZ is sensitive to convective mixing, but such a framework is energetically inconsistent. Studies also show that atmosphere‐ocean coupling reduces the sensitivity of the ITCZ to hemispherically asymmetric forcing. We investigate the effect of atmosphere‐ocean coupling on the sensitivity of the ITCZ to convective mixing using an idealized modeling framework with an Ekman‐driven ocean energy transport (OET). Coupling reduces the sensitivity of the ITCZ location to convective mixing due to SST changes. In prescribed‐SST simulations reducing convective mixing promotes a double ITCZ, while in coupled simulations, it increases the meridional SST gradient which promotes an equatorward ITCZ shift. Prescribing OET in additional experiments has a minimal effect on the sensitivity of the ITCZ location to mixing but does increase the sensitivity of the ITCZ intensity by constraining the net‐downward surface energy flux. Decreasing convective mixing increases net‐downward shortwave cloudy‐sky radiation associated with increased latent heat fluxes and an intensified ITCZ. For simulations analyzed the atmospheric energy input framework is inadequate to study ITCZ dynamics due to the contribution of transient eddies to the atmospheric energy transport. Prescribing SST or OET may strengthen the sensitivity of the ITCZ to a change in parameterization or atmospheric forcing. Future modeling studies investigating the precipitation response to such changes should be aware of the potential sensitivity of their results to atmosphere‐ocean interactions.https://doi.org/10.1029/2020MS002322Intertropical Convergence Zoneconvectionatmosphere‐ocean couplingaquaplanetocean dynamicstropical rainfall
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author J. Talib
S. J. Woolnough
N. P. Klingaman
C. E. Holloway
spellingShingle J. Talib
S. J. Woolnough
N. P. Klingaman
C. E. Holloway
The Effect of Atmosphere‐Ocean Coupling on the Sensitivity of the ITCZ to Convective Mixing
Journal of Advances in Modeling Earth Systems
Intertropical Convergence Zone
convection
atmosphere‐ocean coupling
aquaplanet
ocean dynamics
tropical rainfall
author_facet J. Talib
S. J. Woolnough
N. P. Klingaman
C. E. Holloway
author_sort J. Talib
title The Effect of Atmosphere‐Ocean Coupling on the Sensitivity of the ITCZ to Convective Mixing
title_short The Effect of Atmosphere‐Ocean Coupling on the Sensitivity of the ITCZ to Convective Mixing
title_full The Effect of Atmosphere‐Ocean Coupling on the Sensitivity of the ITCZ to Convective Mixing
title_fullStr The Effect of Atmosphere‐Ocean Coupling on the Sensitivity of the ITCZ to Convective Mixing
title_full_unstemmed The Effect of Atmosphere‐Ocean Coupling on the Sensitivity of the ITCZ to Convective Mixing
title_sort effect of atmosphere‐ocean coupling on the sensitivity of the itcz to convective mixing
publisher American Geophysical Union (AGU)
series Journal of Advances in Modeling Earth Systems
issn 1942-2466
publishDate 2020-12-01
description Abstract The Intertropical Convergence Zone (ITCZ) is a discontinuous, zonal precipitation band that plays a crucial role in the global hydrological cycle. Previous studies using prescribed sea surface temperature (SST) aquaplanets show the ITCZ is sensitive to convective mixing, but such a framework is energetically inconsistent. Studies also show that atmosphere‐ocean coupling reduces the sensitivity of the ITCZ to hemispherically asymmetric forcing. We investigate the effect of atmosphere‐ocean coupling on the sensitivity of the ITCZ to convective mixing using an idealized modeling framework with an Ekman‐driven ocean energy transport (OET). Coupling reduces the sensitivity of the ITCZ location to convective mixing due to SST changes. In prescribed‐SST simulations reducing convective mixing promotes a double ITCZ, while in coupled simulations, it increases the meridional SST gradient which promotes an equatorward ITCZ shift. Prescribing OET in additional experiments has a minimal effect on the sensitivity of the ITCZ location to mixing but does increase the sensitivity of the ITCZ intensity by constraining the net‐downward surface energy flux. Decreasing convective mixing increases net‐downward shortwave cloudy‐sky radiation associated with increased latent heat fluxes and an intensified ITCZ. For simulations analyzed the atmospheric energy input framework is inadequate to study ITCZ dynamics due to the contribution of transient eddies to the atmospheric energy transport. Prescribing SST or OET may strengthen the sensitivity of the ITCZ to a change in parameterization or atmospheric forcing. Future modeling studies investigating the precipitation response to such changes should be aware of the potential sensitivity of their results to atmosphere‐ocean interactions.
topic Intertropical Convergence Zone
convection
atmosphere‐ocean coupling
aquaplanet
ocean dynamics
tropical rainfall
url https://doi.org/10.1029/2020MS002322
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