Nature Communications (Sep 2024)

Midlatitude mesoscale thermal Air-sea interaction enhanced by greenhouse warming

  • Xiaohui Ma,
  • Xingzhi Zhang,
  • Lixin Wu,
  • Zhili Tang,
  • Peiran Yang,
  • Fengfei Song,
  • Zhao Jing,
  • Hui Chen,
  • Yushan Qu,
  • Man Yuan,
  • Zhaohui Chen,
  • Bolan Gan

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-024-52077-z
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 15, no. 1
pp. 1 – 9

Abstract

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Abstract The influence of greenhouse warming on mesoscale air-sea interactions, crucial for modulating ocean circulation and climate variability, remains largely unexplored due to the limited resolution of current climate models. Additionally, there is a lack of theoretical frameworks for assessing changes in mesoscale coupling due to warming. Here, we address these gaps by analyzing eddy-resolving high-resolution climate simulations and observations, focusing on the mesoscale thermal interaction dominated by mesoscale sea surface temperature (SST) and latent heat flux (LHF) coupling in winter. Our findings reveal a consistent increase in mesoscale SST-LHF coupling in the major western boundary current regions under warming, characterized by a heightened nonlinearity between warm and cold eddies and a more pronounced enhancement in the northern hemisphere. To understand the dynamics, we develop a theoretical framework that links mesoscale thermal coupling changes to large-scale factors, which indicates that the projected changes are collectively determined by historical background wind, SST, and the rate of SST warming. Among these factors, the large-scale SST and its warming rate are the primary drivers of hemispheric asymmetry in mesoscale coupling intensification. This study introduces a simplified approach for assessing the projected mesoscale thermal coupling changes in a warming world.