A33E-0219
Understanding tropical upper tropospheric warming: The role of SSTs, convective parameterizations, and observational uncertainties

Wednesday, 16 December 2015
Poster Hall (Moscone South)
Stephen Po-Chedley1, Tyler James Thorsen2 and Qiang Fu1, (1)University of Washington Seattle Campus, Seattle, WA, United States, (2)NASA Langley Research Center, Hampton, VA, United States
Abstract:
Recent research has compared CMIP5 general circulation model (GCM) simulations with satellite observations of warming in the tropical upper troposphere relative to the lower-middle troposphere. Although the pattern of SST warming is important, this research demonstrated that models overestimate increases in static stability between the mid- to upper- tropical troposphere, even when they are forced with historical sea surface temperatures. This discrepancy between satellite-borne microwave sounding unit measurements (MSU) and GCMs is important because it has implications for the strength of the lapse rate and water vapor feedback. 

The apparent model-observational difference for changes in static stability in the tropical upper troposphere represents an important problem, but it is not clear whether the difference is a result of common biases in GCMs, biases in observational datasets, or both. In this work, we will use GCM simulations to examine the importance of the spatial pattern of SST warming and different convective parameterizations in determining the lapse rate changes in tropical troposphere. We will also consider uncertainties in MSU satellite observations, including changes in the diurnal sampling of temperature and instrument calibration biases when comparing GCMs with the observed record.