1 Introduction

A number of recent studies have shown a strong link between hemispheric asymmetry in tropical precipitation and the atmospheric energy budget. The energetics framework has been used to explain why the mean position of the Intertropical Convergence Zone (ITCZ) is in the Northern Hemisphere (Frierson et al. 2013; Marshall et al. 2013), to demonstrate the large-scale circulation and precipitation responses to changes in the hemispheric distribution of heating due to various forcing mechanisms (Yoshimori and Broccoli 2008; Kang et al. 2008, 2009; Frierson and Hwang 2012; Hwang et al. 2013; Voigt et al. 2014; Haywood et al. 2015), and to evaluate the realism of climate models using observations (Hwang and Frierson 2013; Donohoe et al. 2013).

Satellite observations indicate that there is a net gain of radiative energy at the top-of-atmosphere (TOA) in the Southern Hemisphere (SH) and a net loss in the Northern Hemisphere (NH). To compensate, the combined atmospheric and oceanic circulations transport energy across the equator from the SH to the NH (Frierson et al. 2013; Marshall et al. 2013). A common approach for inferring the oceanic contribution to cross-equatorial energy transport is to estimate the hemispheric mean surface energy budget in the SH and NH from the difference between satellite TOA net radiation and divergence of total atmospheric energy transport from reanalysis (Trenberth and Caron 2001; Trenberth and Fasullo 2008; Frierson et al. 2013; Marshall et al. 2013; Liu et al. 2015). It is found that the asymmetry in the SH and NH surface energy budget is twice that at the TOA, implying a SH to NH ocean heat transport (mainly in the Atlantic meridional overturning circulation) and an atmospheric heat transport in the opposite direction (Fig. 1). Frierson et al. (2013) and Marshall et al. (2013) argue that the latter is accomplished via a southward cross-equatorial energy transport in the upper branch of the Hadley Circulation (mainly dry static energy) and a northward cross-equatorial moisture transport in the lower branch of the Hadley Circulation, resulting in an ITCZ located just north of the equator. Both studies emphasize that the hemispheric asymmetry of atmospheric heating is primarily due to ocean heat transport across the equator and slab ocean aquaplanet simulations were used to illustrate the link between the ITCZ’s location north of the equator and cross-equatorial ocean energy transport.

Fig. 1
figure 1

Implied cross-equatorial energy transports in the atmosphere and ocean inferred from hemispheric asymmetries in CERES TOA and surface energy budgets and mass corrected divergence in ERA-interim atmospheric total energy transport

Here, we expand upon these earlier studies by also considering estimates of hemispheric asymmetry in surface and atmospheric radiation budget derived from satellite observations. This enables a decomposition of cross-equatorial heat transport in terms of radiative and non-radiative (i.e., combined latent and sensible heat) components. We demonstrate the utility of this decomposition by comparing the observational results with output from 30 models that participated in the Coupled Model Intercomparison Project Phase 5 (CMIP5) (Taylor et al. 2012). This framework is also used to revisit the precipitation asymmetry problem in climate models exhibiting excessive SH tropical precipitation compared to observations (Hwang and Frierson 2013).

2 Data and methods

2.1 Cross-equatorial heat transport

Previous studies (Trenberth and Fasullo 2008; Fasullo and Trenberth 2008) have shown that the monthly net surface energy flux (\(F_{s}\)) at a given location can be inferred from the vertically integrated atmospheric energy budget equation using satellite observations of net downward TOA radiation (\(R_{T} )\) and reanalysis output of total atmospheric energy tendency \(\left( {\frac{{\partial A_{E} }}{\partial t}} \right)\) and divergence (\(\nabla \cdot F_{A} )\):

$$F_{s} = R_{T} - \nabla \cdot F_{A} - \frac{{\partial A_{E} }}{\partial t}$$
(1)

where

$$A_{E} = \frac{1}{g}\mathop \int \limits_{0}^{{p_{s} }} \left( {h + k} \right)dp$$
$$F_{A} = \frac{1}{g}\mathop \int \limits_{0}^{{p_{s} }} \left( {h + k} \right)\varvec{\overset{\lower0.5em\hbox{$\smash{\scriptscriptstyle\rightharpoonup}$}} {u} }dp$$

\(A_{E}\) is the vertical integral of total energy and \(F_{A}\) is the atmospheric heat transport, g is the acceleration due to gravity, \(p\) is pressure, and \(\varvec{\overset{\lower0.5em\hbox{$\smash{\scriptscriptstyle\rightharpoonup}$}} {u} }\) is horizontal velocity. Total energy is the sum of moist static energy, \(h = c_{p} T + gz + Lq\), and kinetic energy, \(k\), where c p is the specific heat capacity of air at constant pressure, T is absolute temperature, z is height, L is latent heat of condensation, and \(q\) is specific humidity. In Eq. (1), \(F_{s}\) is defined as positive downwards.

If the net downward radiative flux at the surface (\(R_{s} )\) is known, an estimate of surface sensible and latent heat fluxes, defined as positive downwards, is determined from:

$$Q_{S} = H_{L} + H_{S} = F_{S} - R_{S}$$
(2)

where \(H_{L}\) is surface latent heat flux and \(H_{S}\) is surface sensible heat flux.

Noting that atmospheric heat transport divergence averaged over the Southern Hemisphere equals the heat transport across the equator, Donohoe et al. (2013) derive an expression for the atmospheric cross-equatorial heat transport (AHTEQ) in terms of the hemispheric contrast in the TOA and surface energy budgets and the total energy tendency:

$$AHT_{EQ} = \frac{1}{2}\left( {\Delta R_{T} - \Delta F_{S} - \Delta \frac{{\partial A_{E} }}{\partial t}} \right)$$
(3)

where Δ denotes the SH minus NH difference. \(AHT_{EQ}\) is converted from W m−2 to PW using 1 W m−2 = 0.255 PW (assuming a hemispheric surface area of 2.55 × 1014 m2). A similar expression for ocean equatorial heat transport (OHTEQ) is:

$$OHT_{EQ} = \frac{1}{2}\left( {\Delta F_{S} - \Delta \frac{{\partial O_{E} }}{\partial t}} \right)$$
(4)

where \(\frac{{\partial O_{E} }}{\partial t}\) is the tendency in ocean heat content.

Equations (3) and (4) can be decomposed into radiative and non-radiative contributions:

$$AHT_{EQ} = \frac{1}{2}\left( {\Delta R_{A} + \Delta {\text{Q}}_{A} - \Delta \frac{{\partial A_{E} }}{\partial t}} \right)$$
(5)
$$OHT_{EQ} = \frac{1}{2}\left( {\Delta R_{S} + \Delta {\text{Q}}_{S} - \Delta \frac{{\partial O_{E} }}{\partial t}} \right)$$
(6)

where \(R_{A} = R_{T} - R_{S}\) is net atmospheric radiation, and \(Q_{A} = - Q_{S}\) is combined surface sensible and latent heat flux transfer from the surface to the atmosphere. In Eqs. (5) and (6), the contribution from the hemispheric difference in atmospheric and oceanic tendencies (\(\Delta \frac{{\partial A_{E} }}{\partial t}\) and \(\Delta \frac{{\partial O_{E} }}{\partial t},\) respectively) can be neglected, as these are at least an order-of-magnitude smaller than hemispheric differences in the other terms (Loeb et al. 2014; Durack et al. 2014; Drijfhout et al. 2014; Roemmich et al. 2015).

2.2 Data

2.2.1 Observations

Radiative fluxes are from the Clouds and the Earth’s Radiant Energy System (CERES) Energy Balanced and Filled (EBAF) Ed2.8 product for the TOA (Loeb et al. 2009, 2012) and surface (Kato et al. 2013). We consider a 12-year climatology from January 2001 to December 2012. CERES broadband radiation instruments aboard the Terra (launched in December 1999) and Aqua (launched in May 2002) satellites are used along with 3-hourly geostationary satellite observations that have been cross-calibrated with the more accurate Moderate Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer (MODIS) imager (Salomonson et al. 1989), which is also aboard Terra and Aqua. The methodology used to enhance CERES Terra and Aqua diurnal sampling with geostationary data is described in detail in Doelling et al. (2013). Computed surface radiative fluxes in EBAF are generated using a two-step process (Kato et al. 2013). The first step is to compare computed TOA radiative fluxes from the CERES SYN1 deg Ed3A product (Rutan et al. 2015) with observed CERES EBAF Ed2.8 TOA fluxes. The SYN1 deg computed fluxes are based upon radiative transfer model calculations using MODIS and geostationary satellite-retrieved surface, cloud, and aerosol properties, and reanalysis data for atmospheric state. Next, a Lagrange multiplier procedure is used to objectively adjust the inputs to the radiative transfer model calculation within their uncertainties to ensure consistency between computed TOA fluxes and observed CERES EBAF TOA fluxes. The adjusted input parameters are then used to determine EBAF surface radiative fluxes that are internally consistent with EBAF TOA fluxes. Input parameter uncertainties are determined through comparisons with observations from the Atmospheric Infrared Sounder (AIRS; Chahine et al. 2006), Cloud–Aerosol Lidar and Infrared Pathfinder Satellite Observations (CALIPSO; Winker et al. 2010) and CloudSat (Stephens et al. 2008) (see Kato et al. 2013 for details).

Total atmospheric energy divergence (\(\nabla \cdot F_{A} )\) for January 2001–December 2012 is obtained from NCAR (2014), which provides mass corrected vertically integrated energy budget terms (Trenberth et al. 2011) for European Center for Medium-Range Weather Forecasts (ECMWF) Interim Re-Analysis (ERA-Interim; Dee et al. 2011) data. \(F_{s}\) is determined as a residual from the terms on the right-hand side of Eq. (1), and \(Q_{A} = - Q_{S}\), which is determined from the expression on the right-hand side of Eq. (2).

Monthly precipitation rates from the Global Precipitation Climatology Project (GPCP; Adler et al. 2003; Huffman et al. 2009) version 2.2 are also used in this study. Over ocean, GPCP combines precipitation information from the Special Sensor Microwave Imager (SSM/I) aboard the Defense Meteorological Satellite, infrared precipitation estimates from geostationary satellites, the Atmospheric Infrared Sounder (AIRS) data from the NASA Aqua, the Television Infrared Observation Satellite Program (TIROS) Operational Vertical Sounder (TOVS) and Outgoing Longwave Radiation Precipitation Index (OPI) data from the NOAA satellites. Over land, it relies on gauge data to calibrate the microwave and infrared-based satellite estimates.

Because cross-equatorial heat transport is inferred from hemispheric differences in energy budget terms, any systematic bias common to both hemispheres cancels in the difference. As a result, the observational uncertainty is smaller than that of a global or hemispheric mean value. As described in detail in “Appendix”, we estimate the uncertainty in total cross-equatorial heat transport (HT EQ ) to be 0.05 PW. For AHTEQ and OHTEQ, uncertainties are 0.04 PW and 0.07 PW, respectively. Uncertainties for individual components are 0.10 PW, 0.12 PW and 0.11 PW for ΔRS, ΔQS and ΔRA, respectively.

2.2.2 CMIP5 model simulations

Multiple coupled atmosphere–ocean model simulations from the CMIP5 historical experiment, which applies realistic changes in radiative forcings since 1850, are considered for the 1980–2004 period. In contrast to the observational approach, where \(F_{S}\) and \(Q_{S}\) are determined as residuals and \(\nabla \cdot F_{A}\) is computed directly, \(F_{S}\) and \(Q_{S}\) are obtained directly from CMIP5 standard model output of surface energy budget terms (\(R_{S}\), \(H_{L}\), and \(H_{S}\)) and \(\nabla \cdot F_{A}\) is determined as a residual term in Eq. (1). Combining the CMIP5 surface energy budget terms with model output of \(R_{T}\) provides the radiative and combined latent and sensible heat flux contributions to \(AHT_{EQ}\) and \(OHT_{EQ}\) (Eqs. 5 and 6). Originally, a total of 38 CMIP5 models were considered (Table 1). However, many models were found to have large inconsistencies between their global mean net TOA and surface energy budgets, implying the existence of a spurious nonzero total atmospheric energy divergence. Here we only consider CMIP5 models in which the multiyear globally averaged difference \(R_{T} - F_{S}\) (or equivalently \(\nabla \cdot F_{A}\)) is smaller than 1 W m−2; only 30 satisfy this criterion (Table 1).

Table 1 List of CMIP5 models considered in this study

It is worth noting that while CMIP5 latent heat flux accounts for evaporation and sublimation, it does not consider the loss of surface energy associated with snowfall over ice-free ocean that melts on contact with the surface. To include this contribution, we subtract the following expression over open ocean from \(H_{L}\) inferred from each CMIP5 model:

$$H_{L}^{f} = L_{f} \rho_{l} S_{R}$$
(7)

where \(L_{f}\) is the latent heat of fusion of water (334 kJ kg−1), \(\rho_{l}\) is the density of water (1000 kg m−3), and \(S_{R}\) is the water-equivalent snowfall rate. For \(S_{R}\) in mm day−1, this corresponds to 3.866 \(S_{R}\) W m−2. We assume a distribution of ice-free ocean from the observed HadISST climatological (1980–2004) sea–ice fraction for all models. Any error introduced by using the HadISST sea ice fraction instead of those from the individual CMIP5 models is expected to be small. Globally, the latent heat of snow fusion over open ocean is between 0.1 and 0.5 W m−2. While this is small compared to latent heat flux by evaporation and sublimation, it is of the same magnitude as the globally averaged value of \(R_{T}\), and therefore is an important term when applying the above energy budget criterion for model selection.

3 Results

3.1 Regional and zonal mean atmospheric energy budget

We first compare observed and CMIP5 multi-model climatological mean regional distributions of the radiative and combined latent and sensible heat flux terms in the atmospheric energy budget (Fig. 2a–i). The multi-model mean is determined by averaging fluxes from CMIP5 models 1–30 in Table 1 after interpolating each model’s output to a common grid of 1° latitude by 1° longitude, which is the spatial resolution of the CERES EBAF data. The observations fall within the model interquartile range in 26, 35 and 38 % of the regions for RA, QA, and \(\nabla \cdot F_{A}\), respectively. For in RA, these typically occur for regions having an absolute model-observed difference <5W m−2 (80 % of the cases), whereas for QA and \(\nabla \cdot F_{A}\), a similar percentage is realized for regions with an absolute difference <10 W m−2.

Fig. 2
figure 2

RA (a, b), QA (d, e) and \(\nabla \cdot F_{A}\) (g, h) inferred from CERES radiative fluxes and mass corrected ERA-interim total atmospheric energy tendency and divergence (left column) and from CMIP5 multi-model mean surface and TOA energy budget terms (middle column). CMIP5 minus observed c RA, f QA and i \(\nabla \cdot F_{A}\)

Regional patterns in \(R_{A}\) are similar between observations and models (Fig. 2a, b), although marked differences are apparent in marine stratocumulus regions off the west coasts of North and South America where the models underestimate atmospheric radiative cooling (Fig. 2c). The likely reasons include an underestimation of non-overlapped low cloud in CMIP5 models (Nam et al. 2012) and a dry bias in the marine boundary layer (John and Soden 2007). The models also show less cooling in middle and high latitudes in both hemispheres. Conversely, CMIP5 atmospheric radiative cooling is more pronounced in convective regions such as central Africa, the Pacific Warm Pool, ITCZ, and the Amazon. Consistent with these results, Li et al. (2013) found that CMIP5 models underestimate TOA reflected solar and overestimate outgoing longwave radiation in convectively active regions of the tropics due to an underestimation in the amount of total ice and liquid atmospheric water content.

Both the observations and models show larger combined latent and sensible heat fluxes over the subtropical oceans compared to other latitudes (Fig. 2d, e), with a maximum at about 20°S in the southern Indian Ocean. Intense heat flux gain also occurs in the warm western boundary currents, such as the Gulf Stream off the east coast of the United States, the Kuroshio Current near Japan, the Agulhas Current off the coast of South Africa, the Brazilian Current off of South America, and the East Australian Current. There is also qualitative agreement in regions with cooler sea surface temperatures, such as the northern Pacific Ocean and Southern Ocean, as well as over vast land masses in the northern hemisphere (e.g., Saharan desert, Asia, North America). The largest differences occur near the equator over the central and eastern Pacific Ocean as well as over the Indian Ocean (Fig. 2f). Differences greater in magnitude than 20 W m−2 also occur in the North Pacific Ocean between 30°N and 50°N and over the Indian Ocean between 20°S and 40°S. Regional patterns in \(\nabla \cdot F_{A}\) (Fig. 2g, h) show a divergence of heat transport equatorward of 40° latitude in regions influenced by deeper convective cloud and cirrus anvils such as the Indian ocean, western Pacific, the tropical Atlantic and equatorial Africa and South America. Convergence of energy in the atmosphere is evident at latitudes greater than 40°, where atmospheric radiative cooling generally dominates over atmospheric heating by latent and sensible heat fluxes. Local maxima in \(\nabla \cdot F_{A}\) are associated with the western boundary currents, while a minimum occurs in the eastern Pacific Ocean cold tongue region.

The atmospheric energy budget terms show remarkable hemispheric symmetry (Fig. 3a–i). Zonal mean hemispheric differences (vertical bars in Fig. 3) are generally less than 20 % of the zonal mean in the tropics and midlatitudes, and closely track one another poleward of 65°. There is a slightly greater contrast in \(\nabla \cdot F_{A}\) between the tropics and midlatitudes in the SH (Fig. 3g), implying a stronger tropical-to-midlatitude heat transport in the SH atmosphere compared to the NH. The stronger convergence of heat in the SH midlatitudes (Fig. 3g) is associated with both increased atmospheric radiative cooling (Fig. 3a) and less latent and sensible heating (Fig. 3d) compared to the NH. Frierson et al. (2013) argue that in response to the weaker poleward heat transport in the NH lower latitudes, the tropical mean atmospheric circulation transports energy from the NH to the SH via a southward cross-equatorial flow. At the same time, hemispheric symmetry in TOA radiation at midlatitudes (Fig. 2a in Frierson et al. 2013) implies a greater ocean heat transport into the NH midlatitudes. Overall, the CMIP5 multi-model mean results show a similar latitudinal dependence in each hemisphere as the observations (Fig. 3b, e, h). The largest discrepancy occurs in the deep tropics around 5°N, where differences are greater in magnitude than 10 W m−2 for Q A (Fig. 3f) and 5 W m−2 for \(\nabla \cdot F_{A}\) (Fig. 3i). These differences are primarily due to excessive Q A in the ITCZ region of the eastern Pacific Ocean region (Fig. 2f).

Fig. 3
figure 3

Zonal mean values corresponding to regional maps in Fig. 2. Bars correspond to SH minus NH difference. Shading denotes CMIP5 model interquartile range

3.2 Energy budget hemispheric asymmetry and cross-equatorial heat transport

At the TOA, the remarkable hemispheric symmetry in absorbed shortwave (SW) radiation in the observations (Voigt et al. 2013; Stephens et al. 2015) is not replicated in the CMIP5 multi-model mean. While observations show a near-zero SW TOA contribution to HT EQ (Table 2), the multi-model mean indicates 1.7 W m−2 more absorbed SW radiation in the SH than in the NH, corresponding to 0.22 PW SH to NH HT EQ (Table 3). The longwave (LW) hemispheric asymmetry in observations and models is in better agreement, contributing approximately 0.2 PW to HT EQ . As a result, HT EQ from the CMIP5 multi-model mean is more than double the observed value. We note that there is significant variability amongst the individual CMIP5 models (Fig. 4a) (standard deviation of 0.33 PW). This large spread is mainly due to differences in SW TOA flux hemispheric asymmetry amongst the models (Fig. 5).

Table 2 Observation based radiative and non-radiative fluxes for global, SH, and NH, and the corresponding implied cross-equatorial heat transport
Table 3 CMIP5 multi-model mean radiative and non-radiative fluxes for global, SH, and NH, and the corresponding implied cross-equatorial heat transport
Fig. 4
figure 4

Cross-equatorial heat transport for a total (HTEQ), b atmosphere (AHTEQ) and c ocean (OHTEQ) from the first 30 CMIP5 models in Table 1 and from observations (thick line). “Mn” corresponds to the multi-model mean value. Gray shading represent the observational uncertainty

Fig. 5
figure 5

a SH minus NH difference in atmospheric LW clear-sky, all-sky and cloud radiative effect (CRE). A positive (negative) SH–NH difference means more LW atmospheric cooling in the NH (SH). b SH minus NH difference in cloud fraction for different cloud height ranges according to CALIPSO and Cloudsat

Except for LW, observed and CMIP5 multi-model mean within-atmosphere energy budget terms are consistent to 5 W m−2 when averaged globally and over each hemisphere (Tables 2, 3). Both the observations and CMIP5 multi-model mean results show stronger net atmospheric radiative cooling (R A ) and combined latent and sensible heating (Q A ) in the SH compared to the NH, primarily determined by lower latitudes (Fig. 3). Consistent with the notion that AHT EQ transports heat from the warmer to colder hemisphere, the hemispheric difference in R A implies an AHT EQ of 0.75 PW from the NH to the SH (Table 2). The SW component of R A hemispheric difference contributes 0.46 PW and the LW contributes 0.29 PW. The hemispheric difference in Q A implies an AHT EQ of 0.51 PW in the opposite direction, resulting in a 0.24 PW NH to SH AHT EQ . In contrast, hemispheric asymmetries in CMIP5 multi-model mean radiative and combined latent and sensible heating are nearly identical but with an opposite sign (Table 3), implying no AHT EQ . However, the individual CMIP5 models show a large spread in AHT EQ (Fig. 4b), with a standard deviation of 0.2 PW. In over half the CMIP5 models considered, the combined latent and sensible heat flux contribution to AHTEQ dominates over the radiative contribution (Fig. 6a), implying a net SH to NH AHTEQ. Of the models showing NH to SH AHTEQ, only 3 models (MPI models) fall within the observational uncertainty for both Q A and R A contributions.

Fig. 6
figure 6

Scatterplots of radiative and combined latent and sensible heat contributions to cross-equatorial heat transport for a atmosphere (AHTEQ) and b ocean (OHTEQ) from individual CMIP5 models, the multi-model mean, and observations. Black solid line corresponds to zero cross-equatorial heat transport. Red dashed line shows pairs of contributions that add to observed AHTEQ or OHTEQ

Cloud, surface and aerosol properties play an important role in determining the SW and LW contributions to hemispheric radiative heating/cooling in the atmosphere. While LW radiative cooling is greater in the NH for clear-sky conditions, the opposite is true for all-sky (Fig. 5a). The sign reversal is associated with a larger cloud fraction in the SH (Stephens et al. 2015), a greater fraction of low clouds in SH, and more high clouds in NH (Fig. 5b). These results are based upon a four-year average of merged CALIPSO, Cloudsat, CERES and MODIS (CCCM) EditionB1 data (Kato et al. 2010). Since low clouds enhance LW radiative cooling of the atmospheric column (Kato 2009), a greater fraction of low clouds in the SH enhances LW radiative cooling relative to the NH. In the SW, radiative heating in the atmosphere is greater in the NH for both clear and all-sky conditions. This is due to a higher surface albedo in the NH with its greater land fraction, which enables more light reflected from the surface to be absorbed by the atmosphere. Furthermore, since pollution is greater in the NH, there are likely more absorbing aerosols in the NH to further increase atmospheric SW absorption. Another contributing factor is precipitable water, which is slightly greater in the NH according to ERA-Interim reanalysis.

At the surface, the CERES data suggest a global mean R S of 109 W m−2, compared to 106 W m−2 for the CMIP5 multi-model mean (Tables 2, 3). Since both are in near surface energy balance, values for Q S are similar. Stephens et al. (2012) estimated an even higher value of Q S (112 W m−2). Remarkably, when Q S is directly obtained from satellite retrievals and/or reanalysis, its value is 14–17 W m−2 lower than what is required to balance the radiative contributions (Stephens et al. 2012; Wild et al. 2013; Loeb et al. 2014). There is still much debate about whether our inability to close the surface energy budget in observations is due to an underestimation in precipitation/evaporation and/or an overestimation in net surface radiation (R S ) (Stephens et al. 2012; Loeb et al. 2014; Behrangi et al. 2014). However, recent studies have shown that satellite-derived downward SW and LW radiative fluxes are consistent with ground observations to within a few W m−2 over both land and ocean (Kato et al. 2013; Loeb et al. 2014; Rutan et al. 2015). It is thus unlikely that a large positive bias in RS is the reason for our inability to close the surface energy budget in observations.

The SH and NH hemispheric mean surface energy budgets show how the surplus of energy associated with the planetary imbalance of 0.6 W m−2 is distributed (Table 2). On average, the SH surface receives an extra 2.3 W m−2 and the NH surface loses 1.1 W m−2. Assuming the hemispheric asymmetry in ocean heat storage is much smaller (e.g. Durack et al. 2014; Drijfhout et al. 2014), this implies a 0.44 PW SH to NH OHTEQ (Frierson et al. 2013; Marshall et al. 2013). The hemispheric asymmetry in R S implies an OHTEQ of 0.95 PW from the SH to the NH and this is counteracted by the hemispheric asymmetry in Q S , which implies an OHTEQ of 0.51 PW from the NH to the SH. The net downward SW and LW radiative fluxes contribute equally to the hemispheric contrast in R S owing to a larger surface albedo and higher surface temperatures in the NH, which cool the surface more effectively. Since downwelling SW at the surface is equal in both hemispheres, the net surface SW contrast between the hemispheres is entirely due to surface albedo. With the exception of the IPSL models and MIROC4 h (models 19–22), which show zero OHT EQ , all CMIP5 models show a SH to NH OHTEQ, but only 8 models fall within observational uncertainty (Fig. 4c). In 20 of the models, SH to NH radiative and NH to SH latent and sensible heat contributions are overestimated compared to the observations by 0.1 PW or more. Consequently, it is quite feasible for a model to have large biases in both the radiative and combined latent and sensible heat components yet still provide the correct OHTEQ. This fortuitous cancelation of error masks more serious problems, some of which we explore further in the next section.

3.3 Revisiting the tropical precipitation asymmetry problem in climate models

Many studies have investigated aspects of the relationship between AHT EQ and the position of the ITCZ and/or differences in tropical precipitation between the NH and SH (Yoshimori and Broccoli 2008; Frierson et al. 2013; Hwang et al. 2013; Donohoe et al. 2013; Frierson et al. 2013; Marshall et al. 2013). Contrary to observations, which show a mean ITCZ at 6°N, more precipitation in the NH than in the SH, and a southward AHTEQ, climate models exhibiting a double-ITCZ and excessive SH tropical precipitation display a northward AHTEQ. Idealized model experiments indicate that when perturbations in one hemisphere are imposed through thermal forcing or changes in surface albedo, the ITCZ and tropical precipitation maximum shift towards the warmer/darker hemisphere (Chiang et al. 2003; Broccoli et al. 2006; Kang et al. 2008, 2009; Voigt et al. 2014). Because the Hadley circulation in the deep tropics governs atmospheric energy transport, a displacement of the circulation towards the warmer hemisphere is required in order to transport heat away from the warmer hemisphere across the equator via the upper branch of the Hadley circulation (Yoshimori and Broccoli 2008; Frierson and Hwang 2012).

To further explore these ideas in the context of the framework used in the previous sections, we examine the hemispheric asymmetry in RS and QA as a function of the tropical precipitation asymmetry index (TPA index, hereafter), defined as the NH minus SH precipitation difference divided by the tropical mean precipitation for latitudes equatorward of 20° (Hwang and Frierson 2013). The majority of models with excessive tropical precipitation in the SH (negative TPA index) overestimate net downward radiation at the surface and flux too much latent and sensible heat from the surface to the atmosphere in the SH relative to the NH (Fig. 7a, b). In addition, many of the models also underestimate the SH–NH contrast in atmospheric radiative cooling (Fig. 7c). This in turn leads to excessive heating of the atmosphere and cooling of the surface in the SH. Indeed, Hwang and Frierson (2013) find that in CMIP5 models with a negative TPA index, the tropical mean surface air temperature in the NH is similar to or less than that in the SH, whereas the opposite is true in observations and CMIP5 models with a positive TPA index. Associated with the excess heating of the SH atmosphere is a northward AHTEQ (Fig. 7d). In order to achieve the anomalous northward AHTEQ, the Hadley Circulation and ITCZ are displaced southward. For the CMIP5 multi-model mean, the excessive SH–NH contrast in combined latent and sensible heating contributes 60 % to the overall bias in atmospheric cross-equatorial heat transport, while the underestimation in SH–NH contrast in atmospheric radiative cooling contributes 40 %.

Fig. 7
figure 7

a RS, b QA, and c RA SH minus NH hemispheric asymmetry and d AHTEQ against tropical precipitation asymmetry index for individual CMIP5 models and observations. Black solid line is a least-squares fit to the CMIP5 models

3.3.1 Relationship to SW and LW surface flux biases

Both the SW and LW components contribute to hemispheric asymmetry biases in RS in CMIP5 models that overestimate precipitation in the SH. Figure 8 shows the hemispheric asymmetry (SH minus NH) in RS and the corresponding SW and LW contributions for models with negative and positive TPA index. CMIP5 models with negative TPA index overestimate the hemispheric asymmetry in RS compared with CERES by 1.9 W m−2, with the SW component contributing 1.2 W m−2 (63 %) and the LW component contributing 0.7 W m−2 (37 %). In contrast, the average hemispheric asymmetry in RS for CMIP5 models with positive TPA index is within 0.1 W m−2 of CERES, and both the SW and LW components fall within 0.31 W m−2 of the corresponding CERES values.

Fig. 8
figure 8

SH minus NH difference in mean Net, SW and LW downward surface radiation for CMIP5 models with negative and positive TPA Index and CERES observations

The positive hemispheric asymmetry bias in RS for CMIP models with negative TPA index occurs from 10° to 70° (Fig. 9b). There is a positive bias in downward SW radiation in the SH subtropics and extratropics due to an underestimation in SW reflection by clouds (Figs. 9e, 11a). Consistent with these results, Hwang and Frierson (2013) show that models with a double ITCZ have too weak a SW cloud radiative effect over the Southern Ocean due to an underestimation in cloud fraction and/or cloud optical thickness. However, results in Fig. 10e show that the cloud bias also occurs at latitudes as far north as 10°S. Regionally, a positive model bias occurs over each ocean basin in the SH, and is especially large in marine stratocumulus regions (Fig. 11a). Interestingly, CMIP5 models with positive TPA index show a negative bias in zonal mean downward SW radiation in the SH compared to CERES equatorward of 50°S (Figs. 9f, 10f), implying too much cloud reflection. This mainly occurs over the Pacific Ocean between the International Date Line and 90°W, and over the Atlantic Ocean (Fig. 11b), regions associated with trade cumulus. In the NH subtropics and midlatitudes, SW model regional biases are generally positive over land and negative over ocean, except over marine stratocumulus off the coast of North America. Thus, negative regional biases over much of the north Pacific Ocean for CMIP5 models with a positive TPA index (Fig. 11b) are largely offset by positive biases over land at the same latitudes, resulting in relatively small NH zonal mean biases (Fig. 9f).

Fig. 9
figure 9

All-sky SH and NH zonal mean surface radiative fluxes for a net, d SW and g LW from CERES observations. Corresponding CMIP5 minus observed difference for models with TPA index <0 (b, e, h) and TPA index >0 (c, f, i). Bars correspond to SH minus NH difference. Shading denotes CMIP5 model interquartile range

Fig. 10
figure 10

Same as Fig. 9a–i but for cloud radiative effect

Fig. 11
figure 11

All-sky CMIP5 minus CERES a, b SW and c, d LW surface flux difference for CMIP5 models with TPA index ≤0 (left column) and CMIP5 models with TPA index >0 (right column). Stippling denotes regions where the observations lie outside the model interquartile range

Equatorward of 10° latitude, the CMIP5 models overestimate net downward SW radiation at the surface in the NH (Fig. 9e, f), which contributes to a negative hemispheric asymmetry bias in RS (Fig. 9b, c). Regionally, this is due to cloud biases associated with the ITCZ over the central and Eastern Pacific Ocean. Regional biases are also quite large equatorward of 10°S, but substantial cancellation of error across longitudes reduces the zonal mean bias. Poleward of 60°S, both sets of CMIP5 models overestimate net SW downward radiation (Trenberth and Fasullo 2010; Bodas-Salcedo et al. 2014).

The LW contribution to the bias in hemispheric asymmetry is mainly confined to latitudes equatorward of 30° for CMIP5 models with negative TPA index (Fig. 9h). In both hemispheres the surface LW radiative cooling is overestimated compared to CERES, but the bias is stronger for 0°–30°N, resulting in a positive bias in hemispheric asymmetry. Regionally, the model biases between 0° and 30°N are dominated by the Sahel and India (Fig. 11c) with relatively small biases over the tropical oceans where sub-cloud LW emission by water vapor dominates. Results for CMIP5 models with positive TPA index show a marked overall improvement, particularly over the ocean away from the equator (Fig. 11d). Biases in downward LW radiation are still negative, but their magnitude is smaller and exhibits less hemispheric asymmetry (Fig. 9i).

Thus, in CMIP5 models with negative TPA index the model bias in RS hemispheric asymmetry is primarily due to excessive SW surface radiation poleward of 30°S (Fig. 9e) and too much LW surface radiative cooling in the NH tropics equatorward of 30°N compared to the same latitudes in the SH (Fig. 9h). In contrast, SW and LW biases in hemispheric asymmetry for CMIP5 models with positive TPA index largely cancel (Fig. 9f, i), resulting in a much smaller net bias in RS hemispheric asymmetry (Fig. 9c).

4 Summary and conclusions

Recent studies (Frierson et al. 2013; Marshall et al. 2013) have shown strong linkages between hemispheric asymmetries in atmospheric and oceanic energy budgets, tropical precipitation and the mean position of the ITCZ. Here, satellite-based TOA and surface radiation budget observations from CERES are combined with mass corrected vertically integrated atmospheric energy divergence from the ERA-Interim reanalysis to determine the regional distribution of the TOA, within-atmospheric and surface energy budget terms over the globe. The observed regional, zonal, hemispheric and global means are compared with simulations from 30 CMIP5 models in which the multiyear globally averaged net TOA and surface energy budgets are consistent to within 1 W m−2. The atmospheric and oceanic cross-equatorial heat transports in observations and models are further decomposed in terms of radiative and combined sensible and latent heat contributions, which provides a constraint on climate model large-scale energy transport and enables new insights into the precipitation asymmetry problem in climate models exhibiting excessive SH tropical precipitation compared to observations. The results suggest that the known problems in simulating tropical precipitation should not be viewed in isolation but rather as being tightly coupled to systematic biases in the energy budget, both in the atmosphere and ocean and at low and high latitudes.

While regional patterns in net atmospheric radiative flux are similar in observations and CMIP5 multi-model mean results, the models underestimate atmospheric radiative cooling off the west coasts of the Americas due to an underestimation of low cloud coverage. Atmospheric radiative cooling is overestimated in CMIP5 models in convective regions, perhaps due to an underestimation in the amount of total ice and liquid water content (Li et al. 2013). Regional patterns in surface-to-atmosphere sensible and latent heat flux are similar in observations and CMIP5 models, but there are large positive biases in the models just north of the equator over the central and eastern Pacific Ocean and negative biases in the subtropics in both hemispheres that persist even in the zonal average.

At the TOA, the observations show hemispheric symmetry in absorbed SW radiation and more outgoing LW radiation in the NH, resulting in a northward total cross-equatorial heat transport of 0.2 PW. Because CMIP5 models absorb more SW radiation in the SH than the NH, and also emit more outgoing LW radiation in the NH, the total (atmosphere and ocean) cross-equatorial heat transport in CMIP5 models is more than double that of observations. In addition, there is a large spread amongst the models due to differences in the magnitude of SW TOA flux hemispheric asymmetry.

In the atmosphere, observed radiative cooling and the sum of latent and sensible heating are greater in the SH than the NH. While combined latent and sensible heating in the NH exceeds atmospheric radiative cooling, the opposite is observed in the SH. As a result, there is a 0.24 PW transport of heat from the NH to the SH. Expressed in terms of the individual components, the hemispheric contrast in net atmospheric radiative flux implies a heat transport of −0.75 PW and the hemispheric difference in latent and sensible heat implies a 0.51 PW (where positive corresponds to SH to NH heat transport). The corresponding values for the CMIP5 multi-model mean are −0.64 PW and 0.67 PW, respectively, implying near zero atmospheric cross-equatorial heat transport. Only 12 of the 30 CMIP5 models considered show a NH to SH heat transport, and only 3 models (MPI models) fall within the observational uncertainty for both radiative and nonradiative components.

At the surface, the energy gain from radiation and energy loss from combined sensible and latent heating are greater in the SH than in the NH. The observed net downward radiative flux gain in the SH exceeds heat loss due to latent and sensible heat flux, while the reverse is true in the NH. The ocean compensates by transporting 0.44 PW of heat from the SH to the NH. The radiative component contributes 0.95 PW and the latent and sensible heat component contributes −0.51 PW. While virtually all of the CMIP5 models show a SH to NH OHTEQ, two-thirds of the models overestimate the SH to NH radiative and NH to SH latent and sensible heat contributions compared to the observations by 0.1 PW or more, suggesting that many models arrive at reasonable values of OHTEQ through a fortuitous cancellation of error in surface energy budget asymmetry.

Frierson et al. (2013) and Marshall et al. (2013) argue that the hemispheric asymmetry in atmospheric heating (and thus, the mean position of the ITCZ north of the equator) is a consequence of the northwards heat transport across the equator by ocean circulation. While the ocean transport is certainly important, results in this study indicate that the hemispheric asymmetry in atmospheric and surface properties also plays a critical role. Because the SH has a larger cloud fraction and a greater fraction of low clouds, while the NH has more high clouds, LW radiative cooling is more pronounced in the SH than the NH. In addition, the higher surface albedo in the NH and greater abundance of absorbing aerosols and precipitable water further contribute to SW radiative heating of the NH. The net radiative effect is thus cooling in the SH and heating in the NH atmosphere, which enhances the hemispheric asymmetry in atmospheric heating.

The energetics framework shows that most CMIP5 models that overestimate tropical precipitation in the SH compared to observations have too much net downward surface radiation and combined latent and sensible heat flux in the SH relative to the NH. In addition, some models also underestimate atmospheric radiative cooling in the SH compared to the NH. Consequently, models that overestimate precipitation in the SH have excessive heating of the SH atmosphere and anomalous SH to NH cross-equatorial heat transport. The anomalous northward heat transport occurs via the upper branch of the northern Hadley Cell (Hwang et al. 2013). At the same time, there is anomalous transport of moisture from the NH to SH via the lower branch of the northern Hadley cell, which supplies moisture to a SH ITCZ.

For the set of CMIP5 models considered, 65 % of the hemispheric bias in net downward surface flux is from the downward SW component and the remainder is from LW. The hemispheric bias in LW surface radiative flux is due to too much LW surface radiative heat loss in the NH tropics, in particular over north Africa and India, whereas the hemispheric bias in SW surface radiative flux is associated with excessive SW surface radiation in the SH subtropics and extratropics due to an underestimation of reflection by clouds. It is plausible that the LW biases are a symptom of the unrealistic cross equatorial heat transport and resulting biases in precipitation (since drier, cloud-free conditions will enhance LW heat loss from the surface over land).

While the diagnostic framework used in this study does not solve the double ITCZ problem, it does provide useful new observational constraints on large-scale energy budget that need to be satisfied in order to make progress on this problem. This is because the large-scale circulation in the tropics and position of the ITCZ are intricately linked with the large-scale distribution of the energy budget. The decomposition can identify climate models that may provide the correct cross-equatorial heat transport, but for the wrong reason, owing to compensating errors in radiative and combined latent and sensible heat components. We caution that this approach is only really suitable for models with consistent global mean net TOA and surface energy budgets. Models that fail to satisfy this criterion have a spurious nonzero global mean total atmospheric energy divergence, which makes it difficult to meaningfully interpret model biases in large-scale transport using the energetics approached. Nevertheless, diagnostics of hemispheric asymmetry developed in the present study potentially provide a powerful constraint upon important regional biases in precipitation, of great importance in simulating current and future climate variability and change.