Abstract

AbstractInternally generated radiative feedback at interannual timescales can influence climate sensitivity estimates. This study has clarified the mechanisms of variability in radiative feedback associated with the El Niño and Southern Oscillation based on preindustrial control simulations for Coupled Model Intercomparison Project Phase 6. Radiative feedback showed large modulation with a comparable magnitude to the intermodel uncertainty associated with internal changes in the zonal gradient of the ocean thermocline and sea surface temperature (SST) in the equatorial Pacific on interdecadal timescales. When the interdecadal SST anomalies in the eastern and western equatorial Pacific were simulated as positive and negative, respectively, the statistical properties of the interannual variations were also modified with diminished Walker circulation changes per unit of global mean surface temperature rise. Meanwhile, the enhanced local Hadley circulation led to a middle‐to upper‐level cloud decrease and a low‐level cloud increase in the subtropics, causing enhanced negative radiative feedback as a global average.

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