Monday, September 21, 2015

New Article: Solar forcing synchronizes decadal North Atlantic climate variability ,Nature Communications, by R. Thiéblemont


Solar forcing synchronizes decadal North Atlantic climate variability


Rémi Thiéblemont, Katja Matthes, Nour-Eddine Omrani, Kunihiko Kodera & Felicitas Hansen



Quasi-decadal variability in solar irradiance has been suggested to exert a substantial effect on Earth’s regional climate. In the North Atlantic sector, the 11-year solar signal has been proposed to project onto a pattern resembling the North Atlantic Oscillation (NAO), with a lag of a few years due to ocean-atmosphere interactions. The solar/NAO relationship is, however, highly misrepresented in climate model simulations with realistic observed forcings. In addition, its detection is particularly complicated since NAO quasi-decadal fluctuations can be intrinsically generated by the coupled ocean-atmosphere system. Here we compare two multi-decadal ocean-atmosphere chemistry-climate simulations with and without solar forcing variability. While the experiment including solar variability simulates a 1–2-year lagged solar/NAO relationship, comparison of both experiments suggests that the 11-year solar cycle synchronizes quasi-decadal NAO variability intrinsic to the model. The synchronization is consistent with the downward propagation of the solar signal from the stratosphere to the surface.

http://www.nature.com/ncomms/2015/150915/ncomms9268/abs/ncomms9268.html