Journal of Advances in Modeling Earth Systems (Jun 2020)

Convective Boundary Layer Control of the Sea Surface Temperature in the Tropics

  • Frédéric Hourdin,
  • Catherine Rio,
  • Arnaud Jam,
  • Abdoul‐Khadre Traore,
  • Ionela Musat

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1029/2019MS001988
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12, no. 6
pp. n/a – n/a

Abstract

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Abstract Using successive versions of a global climate model, we show how convective transport to the free troposphere of the humidity evaporated at the surface or, reciprocally, entrainment of dry air from the free troposphere into the mixed layer, controls surface evaporative cooling and then sea surface temperature. This control is as important as the radiative effect of boundary layer clouds on radiation. Those aspects are shown to be improved when activating a mass flux representation of the organized structures of the convective boundary layer coupled to eddy diffusion, the so‐called “thermal plume model,” leading to an increased near‐surface drying compared to the use of turbulent diffusion alone. Controlling detrainment by air properties from just above the boundary layer allows the thermal plume model to be valid for both cumulus and stratocumulus regimes, improving the contrast in near‐surface humidity between the trade winds region and East Tropical oceans. Using pairs of stand‐alone atmospheric simulations forced by sea surface temperature and of coupled atmosphere‐ocean simulations, we show how the improvement of the surface fluxes that arise from this improved physics projects into an improvement of the representation of sea surface temperature patterns in the coupled model, and in particular into a reduction of the East Tropical Ocean warm bias. The work presented here led to the bias reduction in sea surface temperature in the Institute Pierre Simon Laplace coupled model, IPSL‐CM6A, developed recently for the 6th phase of the Coupled Model Intercomparison Project, CMIP6.

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