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Aerosol Forcing Masks and Delays the Formation of the North Atlantic Warming Hole by Three Decades

Guy Dagan, Philip Stier, Duncan Watson‐Parris

2020Geophysical Research Letters42 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

The North Atlantic warming hole (NAWH) is referred to as a reduced warming, or even cooling, of the North Atlantic during an anthropogenic-driven global warming. A NAWH is predicted by climate models during the 21st century, and its pattern is already emerging in observations. Despite the known key role of the North Atlantic surface temperatures in setting the Northern Hemisphere climate, the mechanisms behind the NAWH are still not fully understood. Using state-of-the-art climate models, we show that anthropogenic aerosol forcing opposes the formation of the NAWH (by leading to a local warming) and delays its emergence by about 30 years. In agreement with previous studies, we also demonstrate that the relative warming of the North Atlantic under aerosol forcing is due to changes in ocean heat fluxes, rather than air-sea fluxes. These results suggest that the predicted reduction in aerosol forcing during the 21st century may accelerate the formation of the NAWH.

Topics & Concepts

Forcing (mathematics)ClimatologyAerosolNorthern HemisphereEnvironmental scienceGlobal warmingClimate modelClimate changeAbrupt climate changeSouthern HemisphereRadiative forcingAtmospheric sciencesAtlantic Equatorial modeOceanographyNorth Atlantic oscillationEffects of global warmingAtlantic multidecadal oscillationGeologyGeographyMeteorologyClimate variability and modelsAtmospheric and Environmental Gas DynamicsMeteorological Phenomena and Simulations
Aerosol Forcing Masks and Delays the Formation of the North Atlantic Warming Hole by Three Decades | Litcius