The Precipitation Response to an Idealized Subtropical Continent

Author:

Maroon Elizabeth A.1,Frierson Dargan M. W.1,Kang Sarah M.2,Scheff Jacob3

Affiliation:

1. Department of Atmospheric Sciences, University of Washington, Seattle, Washington

2. School of Urban and Environmental Engineering, Ulsan National Institute of Science and Technology, Ulsan, South Korea

3. Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory, Columbia University, Palisades, New York

Abstract

Abstract A subtropical continent is added to two aquaplanet atmospheric general circulation models (AGCMs) to better understand the influence of land on tropical circulation and precipitation. The first model, the gray-radiation moist (GRaM) AGCM, has simplified physics, while the second model, the GFDL Atmospheric Model version 2.1 (AM2.1), is a fully comprehensive AGCM. Both models have a continent that is 60° wide in longitude from 10° to 30°N, in an otherwise slab-ocean-covered world. The precipitation response varies with cloudy- and clear-sky feedbacks and depends on continental albedo. In GRaM simulations with a continent, precipitation in the Northern Hemisphere decreases mostly as a result of decreased evaporation. In AM2.1 simulations, precipitation also shifts southward via Hadley circulation changes due to increasing albedo, but the radiative impact of clouds and moisture creates a more complex response. Results are similar when a seasonal cycle of insolation is included in AM2.1 simulations. The impact of a large, bright subtropical continent is to shift precipitation to the opposite hemisphere. In these simulations, the hemisphere of greater tropical precipitation is better predicted by the hemisphere with greater atmospheric energy input, as has been shown in previous literature, rather than the hemisphere that has higher surface temperature.

Publisher

American Meteorological Society

Subject

Atmospheric Science

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