4.7 Article

A Process Model for ITCZ Narrowing under Warming Highlights Clear-Sky Water Vapor Feedbacks and Gross Moist Stability Changes in AMIP Models

Journal

JOURNAL OF CLIMATE
Volume 36, Issue 15, Pages 4913-4931

Publisher

AMER METEOROLOGICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1175/JCLI-D-22-0689.1

Keywords

Intertropical convergence zone; Diagnostics; Idealized models

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Tropical areas with mean upward motion, known as the intertropical convergence zone (ITCZ), are expected to contract due to global warming. A simple model based on dry static energy and moisture equations is introduced to understand this process. The model reveals that uniform warming leads to contraction of the ascent area and intensification of precipitation, similar to observations and climate models. Parameters related to water vapor feedbacks, cloud-radiative feedbacks, convection-circulation feedbacks, and moisture export play important roles in the model's results.
Tropical areas with mean upward motion-and as such the zonal-mean intertropical convergence zone (ITCZ)-are projected to contract under global warming. To understand this process, a simple model based on dry static energy and moisture equations is introduced for zonally symmetric overturning driven by sea surface temperature (SST). Processes governing ascent area fraction and zonal mean precipitation are examined for insight into Atmospheric Model Intercomparison Project (AMIP) simulations. Bulk parameters governing radiative feedbacks and moist static energy transport in the simple model are estimated from the AMIP ensemble. Uniform warming in the simple model produces ascent area contraction and precipitation intensification-similar to observations and climate models. Contributing effects include stronger water vapor radiative feedbacks, weaker cloud-radiative feedbacks, stronger convection-circulation feedbacks, and greater poleward moisture export. The simple model identifies parameters consequential for the inter-AMIPmodel spread; an ensemble generated by perturbing parameters governing shortwave water vapor feedbacks and gross moist stability changes under warming tracks inter-AMIP-model variations with a correlation coefficient ;0.46. The simple model also predicts the multimodel mean changes in tropical ascent area and precipitation with reasonable accuracy. Furthermore, the simple model reproduces relationships among ascent area precipitation, ascent strength, and ascent area fraction observed in AMIP models. A substantial portion of the inter-AMIP-model spread is traced to the spread in how moist static energy and vertical velocity profiles change under warming, which in turn impact the gross moist stability in deep convective regions-highlighting the need for observational constraints on these quantities.SIGNIFICANCE STATEMENT: A large rainband straddles Earth's tropics. Most, but not all, climate models predict that this rainband will shrink under global warming; a few models predict an expansion of the rainband. To mitigate some of this uncertainty among climate models, we build a simpler model that only contains the essential physics of rainband narrowing. We find several interconnected processes that are important. For climate models, the most important process is the efficiency with which clouds move heat and humidity out of rainy regions. This efficiency varies among climate models and appears to be a primary reason for why climate models do not agree on the rate of rainband narrowing.

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