2019
DOI: 10.1029/2019gl085328
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Transient Response of MJO Precipitation and Circulation to Greenhouse Gas Forcing

Abstract: Recent studies have shown that Madden‐Julian oscillation (MJO) precipitation anomaly amplitude tends to increase while associated circulations weaken at the end of 21st century in Coupled Model Intercomparison Project phase 5 models under Representative Concentration Pathway 8.5. Transient changes of MJO characteristics earlier in the 21st century have received less attention. In this study, changes of MJO precipitation and circulation amplitude during these interim time periods under Representative Concentrat… Show more

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Cited by 18 publications
(33 citation statements)
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References 70 publications
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“…The present paper provides a preliminary assessment of MJO activity changes in precipitation and vertical velocity over the past four decades that include both anthropogenic forcing and natural variability and uses a century‐long data set to assess recent changes in the context of natural variability over the longer record. Our results based on observations support those previously derived from climate models (e.g., Bui & Maloney, 2019) suggesting that decreases in MJO ω 400 / P occur as surface temperatures warm due to anthropogenic forcing. Nevertheless, discrepancies between results from ERA5 and MERRA‐2 leave lingering questions about the degree to which changes to the MJO can be explained by WTG theory, including the assumption that Q 1 has no vertical structural changes in response to climate warming.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 91%
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“…The present paper provides a preliminary assessment of MJO activity changes in precipitation and vertical velocity over the past four decades that include both anthropogenic forcing and natural variability and uses a century‐long data set to assess recent changes in the context of natural variability over the longer record. Our results based on observations support those previously derived from climate models (e.g., Bui & Maloney, 2019) suggesting that decreases in MJO ω 400 / P occur as surface temperatures warm due to anthropogenic forcing. Nevertheless, discrepancies between results from ERA5 and MERRA‐2 leave lingering questions about the degree to which changes to the MJO can be explained by WTG theory, including the assumption that Q 1 has no vertical structural changes in response to climate warming.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 91%
“…Specifically, the occurrence of an MJO event is defined as when the magnitude of the outgoing longwave radiation‐based MJO index (OMI; downloaded from NOAA PSL website; see Kiladis et al, 2014, for definition) exceeds 1.0. Note that we split our analysis into 19‐year periods, and so OMI is normalized within each time period (as in Bui & Maloney, 2019) to reflect possible changes in variance of outgoing longwave radiation fields. Boreal winter (November to April) MJO composites for each of its eight phases are then generated for 30‐ to 90‐day bandpass filtered variables as is commonly done in the MJO literature (e.g., Kiladis et al, 2014).…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Before averaging across the warm pool, amplitude is defined at each location as the root mean squared anomaly across all eight composite phases of the MJO defined according to Wheeler and Hendon (2004). Figure is reproduced courtesy of the American Geophysical Union from Bui and Maloney (2019b).…”
Section: Recent Progress In Understanding Modeling and Predicting Tmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Bui and Maloney (2019a) reported a reduction in MJO precipitation amplitude in the early and middle 21st century in several CMIP5 models in RCP8.5 relative to the historical period, which they hypothesized might have a component due to the direct response of the MJO to greenhouse gas forcing rather than to changes in the thermodynamic environment that lag the forcing. Bui and Maloney (2019b) later analyzed 11 CMIP5 simulations including multiple ensemble members from one model to show that individual changes in MJO precipitation and circulation amplitude in RCP8.5 are not detectable until the last decades of the 21st century, casting doubt on the early 21st century findings of Bui and Maloney (2019a). Despite inability to detect individual changes of MJO precipitation and circulation amplitude, decreases in the ratio of MJO circulation to precipitation anomaly amplitude were detectable as early as the first half of the 21st century, consistent with increased tropical static stability produced by global mean temperature warming (e.g., Maloney & Xie, 2013).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%