Diurnal sea surface temperature drives turbulence in the tropical
atmospheric mixed layer
Abstract
Absorption of sunlight forms a diurnal warm layer (DWL) in the afternoon
at the surface and upper meters of the ocean when wind is weak. Analyses
using models and remote sensing data disagree on the frequency of DWLs
stronger than 1 °C. In situ time series in the central Indian Ocean
showed the DWL exceeded 1 °C for 24% of days in October-December 2011
during the Dynamics of the Madden Julian Oscillation (DYNAMO)
experiment. For 4 days with mean wind of 1.4 m/s, the DWL was 1.5-2.5
°C. We observed atmospheric turbulence over the DWL using Doppler lidar.
Mixed layer turbulence is convective, generated mostly by surface
buoyancy flux. The turbulent kinetic energy dissipation of the
convective marine atmospheric mixed layer scales with surface buoyancy
flux like diurnal convective boundary layers over land and convective
mixed layers in the ocean and lakes. This convection in the afternoon is
out of phase with buoyancy flux from nocturnal atmospheric net radiative
cooling. The afternoon atmospheric convective turbulence over the
tropical ocean mixes heat and humidity from the ocean to the lifted
condensation level of clouds.