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Persistent Discrepancies between Observed and Modeled Trends in the Tropical Pacific Ocean
by
Seager, Richard
, Henderson, Naomi
, Cane, Mark
in
Atmosphere
/ Climate change
/ Climate models
/ Climate science
/ El Nino
/ Equatorial regions
/ Heat
/ Intercomparison
/ Mixed layer depth
/ Ocean circulation
/ Ocean temperature
/ Oceanic analysis
/ Oceans
/ Radiative forcing
/ Sea surface temperature
/ Shoaling
/ Simulation
/ Temperature gradients
/ Thermocline
/ Thermocline depth
/ Trends
/ Upper ocean
/ Upwelling
/ Variability
/ Wind
2022
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Persistent Discrepancies between Observed and Modeled Trends in the Tropical Pacific Ocean
by
Seager, Richard
, Henderson, Naomi
, Cane, Mark
in
Atmosphere
/ Climate change
/ Climate models
/ Climate science
/ El Nino
/ Equatorial regions
/ Heat
/ Intercomparison
/ Mixed layer depth
/ Ocean circulation
/ Ocean temperature
/ Oceanic analysis
/ Oceans
/ Radiative forcing
/ Sea surface temperature
/ Shoaling
/ Simulation
/ Temperature gradients
/ Thermocline
/ Thermocline depth
/ Trends
/ Upper ocean
/ Upwelling
/ Variability
/ Wind
2022
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While trying to remove the title from your shelf something went wrong :( Kindly try again later!
Do you wish to request the book?
Persistent Discrepancies between Observed and Modeled Trends in the Tropical Pacific Ocean
by
Seager, Richard
, Henderson, Naomi
, Cane, Mark
in
Atmosphere
/ Climate change
/ Climate models
/ Climate science
/ El Nino
/ Equatorial regions
/ Heat
/ Intercomparison
/ Mixed layer depth
/ Ocean circulation
/ Ocean temperature
/ Oceanic analysis
/ Oceans
/ Radiative forcing
/ Sea surface temperature
/ Shoaling
/ Simulation
/ Temperature gradients
/ Thermocline
/ Thermocline depth
/ Trends
/ Upper ocean
/ Upwelling
/ Variability
/ Wind
2022
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Persistent Discrepancies between Observed and Modeled Trends in the Tropical Pacific Ocean
Journal Article
Persistent Discrepancies between Observed and Modeled Trends in the Tropical Pacific Ocean
2022
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Overview
The trends over recent decades in tropical Pacific sea surface and upper ocean temperature are examined in observations-based products, an ocean reanalysis and the latest models from the Coupled Model Intercomparison Project phase six and the Multimodel Large Ensembles Archive. Comparison is made using three metrics of sea surface temperature (SST) trend—the east–west and north–south SST gradients and a pattern correlation for the equatorial region—as well as change in thermocline depth. It is shown that the latest generation of models persist in not reproducing the observations-based SST trends as a response to radiative forcing and that the latter are at the far edge or beyond the range of modeled internal variability. The observed combination of thermocline shoaling and lack of warming in the equatorial cold tongue upwelling region is similarly at the extreme limit of modeled behavior. The persistence over the last century and a half of the observed trend toward an enhanced east–west SST gradient and, in four of five observed gridded datasets, to an enhanced equatorial north–south SST gradient, is also at the limit of model behavior. It is concluded that it is extremely unlikely that the observed trends are consistent with modeled internal variability. Instead, the results support the argument that the observed trends are a response to radiative forcing in which an enhanced east–west SST gradient and thermocline shoaling are key and that the latest generation of climate models continue to be unable to simulate this aspect of climate change.
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