Tropical temperature distributions over a wide range of climates: theory and idealized simulations
Joshua A. M. Duffield, Michael P. Byrne

TL;DR
This study uses idealized climate models to analyze how tropical temperature distributions respond to warming, revealing contrasting land and ocean behaviors driven by local convective processes and moisture dynamics.
Contribution
It introduces a novel theoretical framework based on local convective coupling to explain differential temperature responses over land and ocean.
Findings
Hot days over land are amplified due to drier conditions and the drier-get-hotter mechanism.
Over ocean, hot days are suppressed, leading to a narrowing of the temperature distribution.
Multiple physical mechanisms, including humidity and free-tropospheric temperature changes, influence temperature extremes.
Abstract
Understanding future changes in temperature variability and extremes is an important scientific challenge with societal impacts. Here the responses of daily near-surface temperature distributions to climate warming is explored using an idealized GCM. Simulations of a wide range of climate states are performed using both a slab-ocean aquaplanet configuration and a simple continental configuration with a bucket-style model for land hydrology. In the tropics, the responses of extreme temperatures to climate change contrast strongly over land and ocean. Over land, warming is amplified for hot days relative to the average summer day. But over ocean, warming is suppressed for hot days, implying a narrowing of the temperature distribution. Previous studies have developed theories based on convective coupling to interpret changes in extreme temperatures over land. Building on that work, the…
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