Surface Heat Capacity Controls the Existence of Summertime Radiative
Convective Equilibrium in the Midlatitudes
Abstract
Energy balance regimes (e.g., Radiative Convective Equilibrium or RCE)
qualitatively characterize the low, mid, and high latitudes of Earth’s
modern climate. Currently we do not have a complete quantitative
understanding of the spatio-temporal structure of energy balance
regimes. Here we use the vertically-integrated moist static energy
budget to define a nondimensional number that quantifies when and where
RCE is approximately satisfied in Earth’s modern climate. We find RCE
exists yearround in the tropics and also in the Northern midlatitudes
during summertime. Decomposing the seasonal RCE regime transition in the
midlatitudes over land and ocean shows that RCE occurs predominantly
over land. We use idealized models (energy balance and aquaplanet
models) to test the hypothesis that the RCE regime occurs during
midlatitude summer for land-like (small heat capacity) surface
conditions. Consistent with the hypothesis, an aquaplanet model
configured with a shallow mixed layer depth transitions to RCE in the
midlatitudes during summertime whereas it does not for a deep mixed
layer depth.