Abstract
Atmospheric convection across the northern inter-Americas is modulated by trade-wind subsidence and subtropical easterly waves from June to October. Northward migration of the equatorial trough is coupled to the meridional circulation (MC) and surface temperatures above 27ºC. Forming a MC index via S-N height sections of total and anomalous streamfunction, statistical relationships are examined which focus on Jun-Oct season when the South American monsoon is quiescent. Both east Pacific and tropical north Atlantic exhibit cool ocean – dry atmosphere response to an intensified MC. During periods of faster MC, composite humidity is depleted over the Caribbean 10–25 N in conjunction with westerly wind shear, thereby limiting atmospheric convection. The ocean response to intensified MC is evaporative cooling and a deep layer of increased salinity in the Caribbean, that may sustain anomalous air-sea interactions. Long-term trends reveal intensification of the MC in boreal summer: rising over the Amazon, subsiding over the Caribbean, inter-connected by lower and upper airflows. The annually pulsed MC conspires with inter-decadal trends to produce many of the features presented.
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