Water vapor changes under global warming and the linkage to present-day interannual variabilities in CMIP5 models

被引:0
作者
Hanii Takahashi
Hui Su
Jonathan H. Jiang
机构
[1] California Institute of Technology,Jet Propulsion Laboratory
来源
Climate Dynamics | 2016年 / 47卷
关键词
Water vapor; CMIP5; Interannual variations; Climate model; Climate change;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
The fractional water vapor changes under global warming across 14 Coupled Model Intercomparison Project Phase 5 simulations are analyzed. We show that the mean fractional water vapor changes under global warming in the tropical upper troposphere between 300 and 100 hPa range from 12.4 to 28.0 %/K across all models while the fractional water vapor changes are about 5–8 %/K in other regions and at lower altitudes. The “upper-tropospheric amplification” of the water vapor change is primarily driven by a larger temperature increase in the upper troposphere than in the lower troposphere per degree of surface warming. The relative contributions of atmospheric temperature and relative humidity changes to the water vapor change in each model vary between 71.5 to 131.8 % and 24.8 to −20.1 %, respectively. The inter-model differences in the water vapor change is primarily caused by differences in temperature change, except over the inter-tropical convergence zone within 10°S–10°N where the model differences due to the relative humidity change are significant. Furthermore, we find that there is generally a positive correlation between the rates of water vapor change for long-tem surface warming and those on the interannual time scales. However, the rates of water vapor change under long-term warming have a systematic offset from those on the inter-annual time scales and the dominant contributor to the differences also differs for the two time scales, suggesting caution needs to be taken when inferring long-term water vapor changes from the observed interannual variations.
引用
收藏
页码:3673 / 3691
页数:18
相关论文
共 64 条
[1]  
de Forster PMF(2004)Quantifying the water vapourfeedback associated with post-Pinatubo global cooling Clim Dyn 23 207-214
[2]  
Collins M(2008)Water-vapor climate feedback inferred from climate fluctuations, 2003–2008 Geophys Res Lett 35 L20704-1021
[3]  
Dessler AE(2009)A matter of humidity Science 323 1020-6412
[4]  
Zhang Z(2009)Estimates of the water vapor climate feedback during El Niño-Southern oscillation J Clim 22 6404-794
[5]  
Yang P(2012)A less cloudy future: the role of subtropical subsidence in climate sensitivity Science 338 792-259
[6]  
Dessler AE(2009)Tropical tropopause layer Rev. Geophys. 47 RG1004-241
[7]  
Sherwood SC(1967)Thermal equilibrium of atmosphere with a given distribution of relative humidity J Atmos Sci 24 241-1282
[8]  
Dessler AE(2011)The RCP greenhouse gas concentrations and their extension from 1765 to 2300 Clim Change 109 213-1141
[9]  
Wong S(2004)Water vapor feedback in the tropical upper troposphere: Model results and observations J Clim 17 1272-42
[10]  
Fasullo JT(2006)Anthropogenic and natural influences in the evolution of lower stratospheric cooling Science 311 1138-3360