Energy Balance and Lapse Rate Regimes in the Modern Climate and Their Response to Warming

In response to anthropogenic forcing, climate models project tropical amplification of warming aloft and Arctic amplification of surface warming. The vertical and latitudinal structure of warming has important implications for the response of tropical and extratropical storms and the mean circulatio...

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Main Author: Miyawaki, Osamu
Format: Text
Language:English
Published: The University of Chicago 2022
Subjects:
Rae
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.6082/uchicago.5236
http://knowledge.uchicago.edu/record/5236
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spelling ftunichicagoknow:oai:uchicago.tind.io:5236 2023-06-11T04:09:23+02:00 Energy Balance and Lapse Rate Regimes in the Modern Climate and Their Response to Warming Miyawaki, Osamu 2022-12-16T19:11:59Z https://doi.org/10.6082/uchicago.5236 http://knowledge.uchicago.edu/record/5236 en eng The University of Chicago https://knowledge.uchicago.edu/record/5236/files/Miyawaki_uchicago_0330D_16667.pdf doi:10.6082/uchicago.5236 http://knowledge.uchicago.edu/record/5236 http://knowledge.uchicago.edu/record/5236 Text 2022 ftunichicagoknow https://doi.org/10.6082/uchicago.5236 2023-04-19T15:30:03Z In response to anthropogenic forcing, climate models project tropical amplification of warming aloft and Arctic amplification of surface warming. The vertical and latitudinal structure of warming has important implications for the response of tropical and extratropical storms and the mean circulation to climate change. While previous studies have shown that key features of the tropical and polar warming response can be qualitatively understood from simple column models of temperature, namely Radiative-Convective Equilibrium (RCE) and Radiative-Advective Equilibrium (RAE) in the tropics and poles, we currently do not have a complete quantitative understanding of the spatio-temporal structure of RCE and RAE (energy balance regimes) and their connection to the vertical structure of warming (lapse rate regimes). Improving our understanding by linking theory and models of varying complexity increases our confidence in climate change projections, which exhibit structural and parameter uncertainty. In this thesis, I contribute to our understanding of Earth’s vertical and latitudinal temperature structure and its response to anthropogenic forcing. I use theory to define energy balance regimes and show that they provide a useful guide for the vertical warming response projected by state-of-the-art climate models. I use idealized models to show that surface heat capacity controls RCE in the midlatitudes and sea ice controls RAE in the polar regions in the modern climate. Quantitatively, however, the RCE warming response (moist adiabatic adjustment) overpredicts the amplification of tropical warming aloft. I quantify the contribution of mechanisms not included in the moist adiabat (surface heterogeneity, the direct CO2 effect, and convective entrainment) on this overprediction. Finally, I show a new energy balance regime emerges in the Arctic by the year 2100, coinciding with the emergence of convective activity, vanishing surface inversion, and melting sea ice. Together the results improve our understanding of and ... Text Arctic Climate change Sea ice Knowledge@UChicago (University of Chicago) Arctic Rae ENVELOPE(-116.053,-116.053,62.834,62.834)
institution Open Polar
collection Knowledge@UChicago (University of Chicago)
op_collection_id ftunichicagoknow
language English
description In response to anthropogenic forcing, climate models project tropical amplification of warming aloft and Arctic amplification of surface warming. The vertical and latitudinal structure of warming has important implications for the response of tropical and extratropical storms and the mean circulation to climate change. While previous studies have shown that key features of the tropical and polar warming response can be qualitatively understood from simple column models of temperature, namely Radiative-Convective Equilibrium (RCE) and Radiative-Advective Equilibrium (RAE) in the tropics and poles, we currently do not have a complete quantitative understanding of the spatio-temporal structure of RCE and RAE (energy balance regimes) and their connection to the vertical structure of warming (lapse rate regimes). Improving our understanding by linking theory and models of varying complexity increases our confidence in climate change projections, which exhibit structural and parameter uncertainty. In this thesis, I contribute to our understanding of Earth’s vertical and latitudinal temperature structure and its response to anthropogenic forcing. I use theory to define energy balance regimes and show that they provide a useful guide for the vertical warming response projected by state-of-the-art climate models. I use idealized models to show that surface heat capacity controls RCE in the midlatitudes and sea ice controls RAE in the polar regions in the modern climate. Quantitatively, however, the RCE warming response (moist adiabatic adjustment) overpredicts the amplification of tropical warming aloft. I quantify the contribution of mechanisms not included in the moist adiabat (surface heterogeneity, the direct CO2 effect, and convective entrainment) on this overprediction. Finally, I show a new energy balance regime emerges in the Arctic by the year 2100, coinciding with the emergence of convective activity, vanishing surface inversion, and melting sea ice. Together the results improve our understanding of and ...
format Text
author Miyawaki, Osamu
spellingShingle Miyawaki, Osamu
Energy Balance and Lapse Rate Regimes in the Modern Climate and Their Response to Warming
author_facet Miyawaki, Osamu
author_sort Miyawaki, Osamu
title Energy Balance and Lapse Rate Regimes in the Modern Climate and Their Response to Warming
title_short Energy Balance and Lapse Rate Regimes in the Modern Climate and Their Response to Warming
title_full Energy Balance and Lapse Rate Regimes in the Modern Climate and Their Response to Warming
title_fullStr Energy Balance and Lapse Rate Regimes in the Modern Climate and Their Response to Warming
title_full_unstemmed Energy Balance and Lapse Rate Regimes in the Modern Climate and Their Response to Warming
title_sort energy balance and lapse rate regimes in the modern climate and their response to warming
publisher The University of Chicago
publishDate 2022
url https://doi.org/10.6082/uchicago.5236
http://knowledge.uchicago.edu/record/5236
long_lat ENVELOPE(-116.053,-116.053,62.834,62.834)
geographic Arctic
Rae
geographic_facet Arctic
Rae
genre Arctic
Climate change
Sea ice
genre_facet Arctic
Climate change
Sea ice
op_source http://knowledge.uchicago.edu/record/5236
op_relation https://knowledge.uchicago.edu/record/5236/files/Miyawaki_uchicago_0330D_16667.pdf
doi:10.6082/uchicago.5236
http://knowledge.uchicago.edu/record/5236
op_doi https://doi.org/10.6082/uchicago.5236
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