The Antarctic Ozone Hole and the pattern effect on climate sensitivity

Since about 1980 the tropical Pacific has been anomalously cold while the broader tropics have warmed. This has caused anomalous weather in mid-latitudes as well as a reduction in the apparent sensitivity of the climate associated with enhanced low cloud abundance over the cooler waters of the easte...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Hartmann, Dennis L
Format: Dataset
Language:unknown
Published: 2022
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1773/49168
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Summary:Since about 1980 the tropical Pacific has been anomalously cold while the broader tropics have warmed. This has caused anomalous weather in mid-latitudes as well as a reduction in the apparent sensitivity of the climate associated with enhanced low cloud abundance over the cooler waters of the eastern tropical Pacific. Recent modeling work has shown that cooler temperatures over the Southern Ocean around Antarctica can lead to cooler temperatures over eastern tropical Pacific. Here we suggest that surface wind anomalies associated with the Antarctic Ozone Hole can cause cooler temperatures over the Southern Ocean that extend into the Tropics. We use the short-term variability of the Southern Annular Mode of zonal wind variability to show an association between surface zonal wind variations over the Southern Ocean, cooling over the Southern Ocean, and cooling in the eastern tropical Pacific. This suggests that the cooling of the eastern tropical Pacific may be associated with the onset of the Antarctic Ozone Hole