Abstract

AbstractCoupled ocean‐atmosphere models still suffer from systematic biases in simulating the sea‐surface temperature (SST) in the equatorial Pacific. Like in many current generations of climate models, the Chinese Academy of Sciences (CAS) Earth System Model (CAS‐ESM2‐0) simulated warmer SST in the eastern Pacific and colder SST in the central to western Pacific at the equator. We analyzed the physical processes causing these biases. We find that model biases in surface heat flux are a consequence, not the cause, of the SST bias. Ocean currents are implicated as the cause. The biases in ocean currents come from both the ocean model itself and the bias in surface winds in the atmospheric model. We show that the bias of ocean currents in the standalone ocean model causes warming in the region of positive precipitation bias in the standalone atmospheric model. When the two models are coupled, the precipitation bias is greatly amplified. Anomalous equatorial winds as atmospheric Rossby‐gravity wave response to precipitation induce additional bias in ocean currents that transport heat in the upper ocean. The cold equatorial SST bias in the central and western Pacific is found to be due to temperature advection by the anomalous zonal currents, while the warm bias in the eastern Pacific is due to advection by the anomalous zonal and meridional currents as well as downwelling. Results from the analysis offer insights into the causes of the SST biases in coupled models in the equatorial Pacific.

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