Unforced surface air temperature variability and its contrasting relationship with the anomalous TOA energy flux at local and global spatial scales
Abstract
Unforced global mean surface air temperature (T) is stable in the long term primarily
because warm T anomalies are associated with enhanced outgoing longwave radiation
(↑LW) to space and thus a negative net radiative energy flux (N, positive downward)
at the top of the atmosphere (TOA). However, it is shown here that, with the exception
of high latitudinal and specific continental regions, warm unforced surface air temperature
anomalies at the local spatial scale [T(θ, φ), where (θ, φ) = (latitude, longitude)]
tend to be associated with anomalously positive N(θ, φ). It is revealed that this
occurs mainly because warm T(θ, φ) anomalies are accompanied by anomalously low surface
albedo near sea ice margins and over high altitudes, low cloud albedo over much of
the middle and low latitudes, and a large water vapor greenhouse effect over the deep
Indo-Pacific. It is shown here that the negative N versus T relationship arises because
warm anomalies are associated with large divergence of atmospheric energy transport
over the tropical Pacific [where the N(θ, φ) versus T(θ, φ) relationship tends to
be positive] and convergence of atmospheric energy transport at high latitudes [where
the N(θ, φ) versus T(θ, φ) relationship tends to be negative]. Additionally, the characteristic
surface temperature pattern contains anomalously cool regions where a positive local
N(θ, φ) versus T(θ, φ) relationship helps induce negative N. Finally, large-scale
atmospheric circulation changes play a critical role in the production of the negative
N versus T relationship as they drive cloud reduction and atmospheric drying over
large portions of the tropics and subtropics, which allows for greatly enhanced ↑LW.
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https://hdl.handle.net/10161/15913Published Version (Please cite this version)
10.1175/JCLI-D-15-0384.1Publication Info
Brown, PT; Li, W; Jiang, J; & Su, H (2016). Unforced surface air temperature variability and its contrasting relationship with
the anomalous TOA energy flux at local and global spatial scales. Journal of Climate, 29(3). pp. 925-940. 10.1175/JCLI-D-15-0384.1. Retrieved from https://hdl.handle.net/10161/15913.This is constructed from limited available data and may be imprecise. To cite this
article, please review & use the official citation provided by the journal.
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Show full item recordScholars@Duke
Wenhong Li
Associate Professor of Climate
Dr. Li's research interests focus primarily on climate dynamics, land-atmosphere interaction,
hydroclimatology, and climate modeling. Her current research is to understand how
the hydrological cycle changes in the current and future climate and their impacts
on the ecosystems, subtropical high variability and change, unforced global temperature variability,
and climate and health issues.

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