Broccoli, A. J.,
N-C. Lau, and M.
J. Nath, 1998: The cold ocean-warm land pattern: Model simulation
and relevance to climate change detection. Journal of Climate,
11(11), 2743-2763.
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| Abstract: Surface air temperatures from a 1000-yr integration
of a coupled atmosphere-ocean model with constant forcing are analyzed
by using a method that decomposes temperature variations into a component
associated with a characteristic spatial structure and a residual. The
structure function obtained from the coupled model output is almost identical
to the so-called cold ocean-warm land (COWL) pattern based on observations,
in which above-average spatial mean temperature is associated with anomalously
cold oceans and anomalously warm land. This pattern features maxima over
the high-latitude interiors of Eurasia and North America. The temperature
fluctuations at the two continental centers exhibit almost no temporal
correlation with each other. The temperature variations at the individual
centers are related to telecommunication patterns in sea level pressure
and 500-mb height that are similar to those identified in previous observational
and modeling studies. As in observations, variations in the polarity and
amplitude of this structure function are an important source of spatially
averaged surface air temperature variability. |
| Results from parallel integrations of models with more simplified treatments
of the ocean confirm that the contrast in thermal inertia between land
and ocean is the primary factor for the existence of the COWL pattern,
whereas dynamical air-sea interactions do not play a significant role.
The internally generated variability in structure function amplitude in
the coupled model integration is used to assess the importance of the upward
trend in the amplitude of the observed structure function over the last
25 years. This trend, which has contributed to the accelerated warming
of Northern Hemisphere temperature over recent decades, is unusually large
compared with the trends generated internally by the coupled model. If
the coupled model adequately estimates the internal variability of the
real climate system, this would imply that the recent upturn in the observed
structure function may not be purely a manifestation of unforced variability.
A similar monotonic trend occurs when the same methodology is applied to
a model integration with time-varying radiative forcing based on past and
future CO2 and sulfate aerosol increases.
This finding illustrates that this decomposition methodology yields ambiguous
results when two distinct spatial patterns, the "natural" COWL
pattern (i.e., that associated with internally generated variability) and
the anthropogenic fingerprint, are present in the simulated climate record. |