Abstract
AbstractThe variability of the shortwave radiative fluxes at the surface and top of atmosphere (TOA) is examined in a pre‐industrial modeling setup using the Pacific Decadal Oscillation (PDO) as a possible pacemaker of atmospheric decadal‐scale variability. Within models from the Coupled Model Intercomparison Project—Phase 6, downwelling shortwave radiation at the surface, the net shortwave fluxes at the surface and TOA, as well as cloud radiative effects show remarkably similar patterns associated with the PDO. Through ensemble simulations designed with a pure PDO pattern in the North Pacific only, we show that the PDO relates to about 20%–40% of the unforced year‐to‐year variability of these shortwave fluxes over the Northern Hemispheric continents. The sea surface temperature imprint on shortwave‐flux variability over land is larger for spatially aggregated time series as compared to smaller areas, due to the blurring effect of small‐scale atmospheric noise. The surface and TOA radiative flux anomalies associated with the PDO index range of [−1.64; 1.64] are estimated to reach up to ±6 Wm−2 for North America, ∓3 Wm−2 for India and ±2 Wm−2 for Europe. We hypothesize that the redistribution of clouds in response to a North Pacific PDO anomaly can impact the South Pacific and North Atlantic SSTs.
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