International audienceThe stationary atmospheric response to an idealized sea surface temperature anomaly (SSTA) is studied with a quasigeostrophic atmospheric model of the Southern Hemisphere. Sensitivity of the stationary response to the midlatitude SSTA location is determined and responses are decomposed on vertical modes. The SSTA almost directly forces baroclinic responses, inducing warm-air anomalies 40°-50° downstream, eastward, to the SSTA. These baroclinic responses arise from an equilibrium between the SSTA-induced anomalous vortex stretching and (i) advection by the quasi-stationary flow and (ii) dissipation by high-frequency eddies. The barotropic response consists of a midlatitude ridge (trough) and a South Pole trough (ridge) ...