Abstract

Abstract The climate sensitivity of Earth and the radiative climate feedback both change over time as a result of a so-called “pattern effect,” i.e., changing patterns of surface warming. This is suggested by numerical climate model experiments. The Atlantic meridional overturning circulation (AMOC) influences surface warming patterns as it redistributes energy latitudinally. Thus, this ocean circulation may play an important role for climate-feedback change over time. In this study, two groups of members from the abrupt4xCO2 experiment of phases 5 and 6 of the Coupled Model Intercomparison Project (CMIP) are distinguished: one group showing weak feedback change and the other showing strong feedback change over time. It is found that both groups differ significantly in the AMOC response to 4xCO2. Therefore, experiments with a slab ocean model (SOM) with quadrupling of the CO2 concentration are performed in which the AMOC change is mimicked by changing the ocean heat transport. It is found that in the Northern Hemisphere extratropics the CMIP model group differences can be qualitatively reproduced by the SOM experiments, indicating that the AMOC plays an important role in setting the surface warming pattern. However, in the tropics and especially in the Southern Hemisphere other explanations are necessary.

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