Abstract
4 Key Points: 5 • The SST contrast increases with warming, primarily
because the clear-sky green-6 house effect feedback is stronger in the
warm region. 7 • As the climate warms, the integrated cooling rate of
the atmosphere increases by 8 moving upward into lower pressures and
increasing in strength, giving a more top-9 heavy cooling profile. 10 •
The more top-heavy cooling rate profile results in increased cloud ice
as the cli-11 mate warms. Abstract 13 Warming experiments with a
uniformly insolated, non-rotating climate model with a slab 14 ocean are
conducted by increasing the solar irradiance. As the climate warms, the
sur-15 face temperature contrast between the warm, rising and cooler,
subsiding regions increases, 16 mostly as a result of the stronger
greenhouse effect in the warm region. The convective 17 heating rate
becomes more top-heavy in warmed climates, producing more cloud ice,
prin-18 cipally because the radiative cooling rate moves to lower
pressures and increases. To pro-19 duce this more top-heavy convective
heating, precipitation shifts from the convective to 20 the stratiform
parameterization. The net cloud radiative effect becomes more negative
21 in the warm region as the climate warms. At temperatures above about
310K surface 22 temperature contrast begins to decline, and the climate
becomes more sensitive. The re-23 duction in SST contrast above 310K
again appears to be initiated by clear-sky radiative 24 processes,
although cloud processes in both the rising and subsiding regions
contribute. 25 The response of clear-sky outgoing longwave to surface
warming begins to accelerate in 26 the region of rising motion and
decline in the region of subsidence, driving the SST con-27 trast to
smaller values. One-dimensional simulations are used to isolate the most
rele-28 vant physics. 29 Plain Language Summary 30 A global model of a
non-rotating Earth with an ocean that stores heat but does 31 not
transport it is run to equilibrium with different values of globally
uniform solar heat-32 ing. Despite the complete uniformity of the
system, it still develops regions of warm sea 33 surface temperature
where rain and rising motion occur, and regions with downward, 34
subsiding air motion where rainfall does not occur. These contrasts look
very similar to 35 what is observed in the present-day tropics. As the
climate is warmed from current tem-36 peratures toward warmer
temperatures, the warm regions warm faster, mostly because 37 the rising
regions contain more water vapor. The clouds rise to higher altitudes in
the 38 warmer climates, and produce more cloud ice. These changes are
shown to arise from 39 well-understood physical processes that are
expected to operate in nature. 40