Comment on "The Tropospheric Land-Sea Warming Contrast as the Driver of Tropical Sea Level Pressure Changes" by Bayr and Dommenget
A. M. Makarieva, V. G. Gorshkov, A.V. Nefiodov, D. Sheil, A. D. Nobre,, B.-L. Li

TL;DR
This paper critiques and revises a model linking tropical sea level pressure changes to temperature, emphasizing the variability of isobaric and isothermal heights and the importance of meridional differences over land-sea contrasts.
Contribution
It introduces a revised relationship between sea level pressure and temperature governed by two parameters and demonstrates that previous assumptions about isobaric heights are not universally valid.
Findings
Isobaric and isothermal heights vary spatially and are not constant.
The ratio of pressure and temperature changes is dominated by meridional differences.
Moisture dynamics remain a key area for further research.
Abstract
T Bayr and D Dommenget [J. Climate 26 (2013) 1387] proposed a model of temperature-driven air redistribution to quantify the ratio between changes of sea level pressure and mean tropospheric temperature in the tropics. This model assumes that the height of the tropical troposphere is isobaric. Here problems with this model are identified. A revised relationship between and is derived governed by two parameters -- the isobaric and isothermal heights -- rather than just one. Further insight is provided by the model of R S Lindzen and S Nigam [J. Atmos. Sci. 44 (1987) 2418], which was the first to use the concept of isobaric height to relate tropical to air temperature, and did this by assuming that isobaric height is always around 3 km and isothermal height is likewise near constant. Observational data, presented here, show that neither of these heights is…
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Taxonomy
TopicsClimate variability and models · Meteorological Phenomena and Simulations · Geophysics and Gravity Measurements
