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The Radiative Forcing Pattern Effect on Climate Sensitivity
  • +4
  • Bosong Zhang,
  • Ming Zhao,
  • Haozhe He,
  • Brian Soden,
  • Zhihong Tan,
  • Baoqiang Xiang,
  • Chenggong Wang
Bosong Zhang
Princeton University

Corresponding Author:[email protected]

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Ming Zhao
GFDL/NOAA
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Haozhe He
University of Miami
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Brian Soden
Univ. Miami, Miami
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Zhihong Tan
Princeton University
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Baoqiang Xiang
NOAA/Geophysical Fluid Dynamics Laboratory, UCAR
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Chenggong Wang
Princeton University
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Abstract

This study investigates how climate sensitivity depends upon the spatial pattern of radiative forcing. Sensitivity experiments using a coupled ocean-atmosphere model were conducted by adding anomalous incoming solar radiation over the entire globe, Northern Hemisphere mid-latitudes, Southern Ocean, and tropics, respectively, with both positive and negative perturbation considered. The varied forcing patterns led to highly divergent climate sensitivities, with extratropical forcing inducing significantly more global-mean temperature change compared to tropical forcing. This dependence is particularly strong over the Southern Hemisphere, where the climate is nearly twice as sensitive to Southern Ocean forcing as tropical forcing. This dependence of climate sensitivity on the location of radiative forcing stems from covariations between lapse rate feedback, cloud feedback and tropospheric stability. These results contrast with the conventional SST-pattern effect in which tropical surface temperature changes regulate the climate sensitivity, and has important implications for geoengineering and understanding the mechanisms of paleoclimate change.
20 Jul 2023Submitted to ESS Open Archive
20 Jul 2023Published in ESS Open Archive