Publication | Open Access
Hadley Circulation Response to Orbital Precession. Part I: Aquaplanets
71
Citations
33
References
2012
Year
Upper AtmosphereEngineeringAngular Momentum BalanceClimate ModelingOceanographyEarth System ScienceEarth ScienceOrbital PrecessionAtmospheric ScienceClimate ChangeClimate VariabilityHadley Circulation ResponseMeteorologySpace WeatherEnergetic StratificationEarth's ClimateClimate DynamicsClimatologySummer Monsoon
Abstract The response of the monsoonal and annual-mean Hadley circulation to orbital precession is examined in an idealized atmospheric general circulation model with an aquaplanet slab-ocean lower boundary. Contrary to expectations, the simulated monsoonal Hadley circulation is weaker when perihelion occurs at the summer solstice than when aphelion occurs at the summer solstice. The angular momentum balance and energy balance are examined to understand the mechanisms that produce this result. That the summer with stronger insolation has a weaker circulation is the result of an increase in the atmosphere’s energetic stratification, the gross moist stability, which increases more than the amount required to balance the change in atmospheric energy flux divergence necessitated by the change in top-of-atmosphere net radiation. The solstice-season changes result in annual-mean Hadley circulation changes (e.g., changes in circulation strength).
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