Abstract

Abstract. Large changes in tropical circulation from the mid-to-late 1990s to the present, in particular changes related to the summer monsoon and cooling of the sea surface in the equatorial eastern Pacific, are noted. The cause of such recent decadal variations in the tropics was studied using a meteorological reanalysis dataset. Cooling of the equatorial southeastern Pacific Ocean occurred in association with enhanced cross-equatorial southerlies that were associated with a strengthening of the deep ascending branch of the boreal summer Hadley circulation over the continental sector connected to stratospheric circulation. From boreal summer to winter, the anomalous convective activity center moves southward following the seasonal march to the equatorial Indian Ocean–Maritime Continent region, which strengthens the surface easterlies over the equatorial central Pacific. Accordingly, ocean surface cooling extends over the equatorial central Pacific. We suggest that the fundamental cause of the recent decadal change in the tropical troposphere and the ocean is a poleward shift of convective activity that resulted from a strengthening of extreme deep convection penetrating into the tropical tropopause layer, particularly over the African and Asian continents and adjacent oceans. We conjecture that the increase in extreme deep convection is produced by a combination of land surface warming due to increased CO2 and a reduction of static stability in the tropical tropopause layer due to tropical stratospheric cooling.

Highlights

  • Large changes in tropical circulation occurred from the midto-late 1990s to the present, in particular changes related to the summer monsoon and cooling of the sea surface in the equatorial eastern Pacific

  • The recent change of tropical convective activity is identified from the July–August–September (JAS) 1999–2016 mean anomalous Outgoing longwave radiation (OLR) relative to the 30-year climatology (1981– 2010; Fig. 1a)

  • It should be noted that the climatological mean streamlines around 15◦ N are connected to the stratosphere by crossing the tropopause (100 hPa) in boreal summer

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Summary

Introduction

Large changes in tropical circulation occurred from the midto-late 1990s to the present, in particular changes related to the summer monsoon and cooling of the sea surface in the equatorial eastern Pacific. An increase in precipitation in southern Africa was observed during austral summer (Vizy and Cook, 2016) In addition to these large-scale circulation changes, variations occurred in mesoscale phenomena such as an increase in mesoscale convective systems (MCSs) over the Sahel (Taylor et al, 2017). Recent numerical model studies show that cooling of the tropopause, as well as SSTs, impacts the intensity of tropical storms (Ramsay, 2013; Wang et al, 2014). The recent cooling of the tropical tropopause and lower stratosphere from around 2000

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