Sulfate Aerosol Control of Tropical Atlantic Climate over the Twentieth Century
Citations Over TimeTop 10% of 2010 papers
Abstract
Abstract The tropical Atlantic interhemispheric gradient in sea surface temperature significantly influences the rainfall climate of the tropical Atlantic sector, including droughts over West Africa and Northeast Brazil. This gradient exhibits a secular trend from the beginning of the twentieth century until the 1980s, with stronger warming in the south relative to the north. This trend behavior is on top of a multidecadal variation associated with the Atlantic multidecadal oscillation. A similar long-term forced trend is found in a multimodel ensemble of forced twentieth-century climate simulations. Through examining the distribution of the trend slopes in the multimodel twentieth-century and preindustrial models, the authors conclude that the observed trend in the gradient is unlikely to arise purely from natural variations; this study suggests that at least half the observed trend is a forced response to twentieth-century climate forcings. Further analysis using twentieth-century single-forcing runs indicates that sulfate aerosol forcing is the predominant cause of the multimodel trend. The authors conclude that anthropogenic sulfate aerosol emissions, originating predominantly from the Northern Hemisphere, may have significantly altered the tropical Atlantic rainfall climate over the twentieth century.
Related Papers
- → El Niño–Southern Oscillation Evolution Modulated by Atlantic Forcing(2020)66 cited
- → A further analysis of the tropical Atlantic SST modes and their relations to north‐eastern Brazil rainfall during different phases of Atlantic Multidecadal Oscillation(2016)36 cited
- → Atlantic Warm Pool acting as a link between Atlantic Multidecadal Oscillation and Atlantic tropical cyclone activity(2008)138 cited
- → Weakened interannual Tropical Atlantic variability in CMIP6 historical simulations(2023)6 cited
- → Atlantic versus Indo‐Pacific influence on Atlantic‐European climate(2005)19 cited