Abstract
Abstract Modeled global warming is often quantified using global near-surface air temperature (Tas). Meanwhile, long-term temperature datasets combine observations of Tas over land with sea surface temperature (SST) over ocean. Modeled ocean Tas warms more than SST, which can bias model–observation comparisons. Skin temperature (Ts), which is typically warmer than Tas, follows SST changes so the ocean surface temperature discontinuity δTs = Ts − Tas decreases with warming. Here I show that under CO2 forcing, decreased δTs is consistently simulated for nonpolar ocean within ±60°S/N, but not for other regions. I investigate the causes of oceanic δTs decrease using a LongRunMIP climate simulation, radiative kernels, and standard methods for diagnosing forcing and feedbacks from the CMIP5 ensemble. CO2 forcing establishes longwave heating of the lower atmosphere and subsequent adjustments that result in a small Tas increase, and therefore a δTs decrease. During the subsequent warming in response to CO2 forcing, the model-mean surface evaporation feedback is 3.6 W m−2 °C−1 over oceans, which reduces Ts warming relative to Tas and further shrinks δTs. Present-day forcing and feedback contributions are of similar magnitude, and both contribute to small differences in model–observation comparisons of global warming rates when these differences are not accounted for. Significance Statement Earth’s surface skin temperature is generally warmer than that of the air just above, and this discontinuity drives upward turbulent heat fluxes. Under global warming, climate models consistently show that over oceans, the air above warms more than the water below. This causes issues when comparing model output and observational temperature records, since observational records blend land air and ocean water temperature. It also affects understanding of how surface energy and moisture fluxes will change with warming. Observational data are currently too uncertain to confidently support or refute this model behavior, and the IPCC recently noted that “there is no simple explanation based on physical grounds alone for how this difference responds to climate change.” This study provides such an explanation for changes over ocean, and shows that this result applies only to nonpolar oceans.
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