The Intertropical Convergence Zone (ITCZ), also known as the doldrums, is one of the dramatic features of Earth's climate system. Prominent enough to be seen from space, the ITCZ appears in satellite images as a band of bright clouds around the tropics. Here, moist warm air accumulates in this atmospheric region near the equator, where the ocean and atmosphere heavily interact. Intense solar radiation and calm, warm ocean waters produce an area of high humidity, ascending air, and rainfall, which is fed by converging trade winds from the Northern and Southern Hemispheres. The convected air forms clusters of thunderstorms characteristic of the ITCZ, releasing heat before moving away from the ITCZ—toward the poles—cooling and descending in the subtropics. This circulation completes the Hadley cells of the ITCZ, which play an important role in balancing Earth's energy budget—transporting energy between the hemispheres and away from the equator.
Scientists are therefore keen to understand the climate controls that drive the north-south movement of the ITCZ over the seasonal cycle, as well as on inter-annual to decadal timescales in Earth's paleoclimatology up through today. Researchers have traditionally approached this issue from the perspective of the atmosphere's behavior and understanding rainfall, but anecdotal evidence from models with a dynamic ocean has suggested that the ocean's sensitivity to climate changes could affect the ITCZ's response.
Now, a study from MIT graduate student Brian Green and the Cecil and Ida Green Professor of Oceanography John Marshall from the Program in Atmospheres, Oceans and Climate in MIT's Department of Earth, Atmospheric and Planetary Sciences (EAPS) published in the American Meteorological Society's Journal of Climate, investigates the role that the ocean plays in modulating the ITCZ's position and appreciates its sensitivity when the Northern Hemisphere is heated. In so doing, the work gives climate scientists a better understanding of what causes changes to tropical rainfall.
"In the past decade or so there's been a lot of research studying controls on the north-south position of the ITCZ, particularly from this energy balance perspective. ... And this has normally been done in the context of ignoring the adjustment of the ocean circulation—the ocean circulation is either forcing these [ITCZ] shifts or passively responding to changes in the atmosphere above," Green says. "But we know, particularly in the tropics, that the ocean circulation is very tightly coupled through the trade winds to atmospheric circulation and the ITCZ position, so what we wanted to do was investigate how that ocean circulation might feedback on the energy balance that controls that ITCZ position, and how strong that feedback might be."
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Global circulation of Earth’s atmosphere displays a Hadley cell, Ferrell cell, and polar cell [Credit: NASA and Kaidor/WikiCommons] |
Green and Marshall then ran the asymmetrically heated planet simulations in two ocean configurations and compared the ITCZ responses. The first used a stationary "slab ocean," where the thermal properties were specified so that it mimicked the fully coupled model before perturbation, but was unable to respond to the heating. The second incorporated a dynamic ocean circulation. By forcing the models identically, they could quantify the ocean circulation's impact on the ITCZ.
"We found in the case where there's a fully coupled, dynamic ocean, the northward shift of the ITCZ was damped by a factor of four compared to the passive ocean. So that's hinting that the ocean is one of the leading controls on the position of the ITCZ," Green says. "It's a significant damping of the response of the atmosphere, and the reason behind this can just be diagnosed from that energy balance."
In the dynamic ocean model, they found that when they heat the simulated ocean-covered planet, eddies export some heat into the tropical atmosphere from the extra-tropics, which causes the Hadley cells to respond—the Northern Hemisphere cell to weaken and the Southern Hemisphere cell to strengthen. This transports heat southward through the atmosphere. Concurrently, the ITCZ shifts northward; associated with this are changes in the trade winds—the surface branch of the Hadley cells—and the surface wind stress near the equator.
"In the slab ocean case, only the atmosphere can move heat across the equator; whereas in our fully coupled case, we see that the ocean is the most strongly compensating component of the system, transporting the majority of the forcing across the equator." Green says. "So from the atmosphere's perspective, it doesn't even feel the full effect of that heating that we're imposing. And as a result, it has to transport less heat across the equator and shift the ITCZ less." Green adds that the response of the large basin ocean circulation broadly mimics the Indian Ocean's yearly average circulation.
Marshall notes that the ability of the wind-driven ocean circulation to damp ITCZ shifts represents a previously unappreciated constraint on the atmosphere's energy budget: "We showed that the ITCZ cannot move very far away from the equator, even in very 'extreme' climates," indicating that the position of the ITCZ may be much less sensitive to inter-hemispheric heating contrasts than previously thought."
Green and Marshall are currently expanding upon this work. With the help of David McGee, the Kerr-Mcgee Career Development Assistant Professor in EAPS, and postdoc Eduardo Moreno-Chamarro, the pair are applying this to the paleoclimate record during Heimrich events, when the Earth experiences strong cooling, looking for ITCZ shifts.
They're also investigating the decomposition of heat and mass transport between the atmosphere and the ocean, as well as between the Earth's oceans. "The physics that control each of those oceans' responses are dramatically different, certainly between the Pacific and the Atlantic oceans," Green says. "Right now, we're working to understand how the mass transports of the atmosphere and ocean are coupled. While we know that they're constrained to overturn in the same sense, they're not actually constrained to transport an identical amount of mass, so you could further enhance or weaken the damping by the ocean circulation by affecting how strongly the mass transports are coupled."
Author: Lauren Hinkel | Source: Massachusetts Institute of Technology [July 31, 2017]