scholarly journals The Annular Response to Tropical Pacific SST Forcing

2006 ◽  
Vol 19 (9) ◽  
pp. 1802-1819 ◽  
Author(s):  
Shuanglin Li ◽  
Martin P. Hoerling ◽  
Shiling Peng ◽  
Klaus M. Weickmann

Abstract The leading pattern of Northern Hemisphere winter height variability exhibits an annular structure, one related to tropical west Pacific heating. To explore whether this pattern can be excited by tropical Pacific SST variations, an atmospheric general circulation model coupled to a slab mixed layer ocean is employed. Ensemble experiments with an idealized SST anomaly centered at different longitudes on the equator are conducted. The results reveal two different response patterns—a hemispheric pattern projecting on the annular mode and a meridionally arched pattern confined to the Pacific–North American sector, induced by the SST anomaly in the west and the east Pacific, respectively. Extratropical air–sea coupling enhances the annular component of response to the tropical west Pacific SST anomalies. A diagnosis based on linear dynamical models suggests that the two responses are primarily maintained by transient eddy forcing. In both cases, the model transient eddy forcing response has a maximum near the exit of the Pacific jet, but with a different meridional position relative to the upper-level jet. The emergence of an annular response is found to be very sensitive to whether transient eddy forcing anomalies occur within the axis of the jet core. For forcing within the jet core, energy propagates poleward and downstream, inducing an annular response. For forcing away from the jet core, energy propagates equatorward and downstream, inducing a trapped regional response. The selection of an annular versus a regionally confined tropospheric response is thus postulated to depend on how the storm tracks respond. Tropical west Pacific SST forcing is particularly effective in exciting the required storm-track response from which a hemisphere-wide teleconnection structure emerges.

2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Veeshan Narinesingh ◽  
James F. Booth ◽  
Spencer K. Clark ◽  
Yi Ming

Abstract. Atmospheric blocking can have important impacts on weather hazards, but the fundamental dynamics of blocking are not yet fully understood. As such, this work investigates the influence of topography on atmospheric blocking in terms of dynamics, spatial frequency, duration and displacement. Using an idealized GCM, an aquaplanet integration, and integrations with topography are analyzed. Block-centered composites show midlatitude aquaplanet blocks exhibit similar wave activity flux behavior to those observed in reality, whereas high-latitude blocks do not. The addition of topography significantly increases blocking and determines distinct regions where blocks are most likely to occur. These regions are found near high-pressure anomalies in the stationary waves and near storm track exit regions. Focusing on block duration, blocks originating near topography are found to last longer than those that are formed without or far from topography but have qualitatively similar evolutions in terms of nearby geopotential height anomalies and wave activity fluxes in composites. Integrations with two mountains have greater amounts of blocking compared to the single mountain case, however, the longitudinal spacing between the mountains is important for how much blocking occurs. Comparison between integrations with longitudinally long and short ocean basins show that more blocking occurs when storm track exits spatially overlap with high-pressure maxima in stationary waves. These results have real-world implications, as they help explain the differences in blocking between the Northern and Southern Hemisphere, and the differences between the Pacific and Atlantic regions in the Northern Hemisphere.


2006 ◽  
Vol 19 (18) ◽  
pp. 4638-4663 ◽  
Author(s):  
Rong-Hua Zhang ◽  
Antonio J. Busalacchi ◽  
Raghuram G. Murtugudde

Abstract In this study, an improved sea surface temperature (SST) anomaly (SSTA) solution for the tropical Pacific is presented by explicitly embedding into a layer ocean general circulation model (OGCM) a separate SSTA submodel with an empirical parameterization for the temperature of subsurface water entrained into the ocean mixed layer (Te). Instead of using subsurface temperature directly from the OGCM, Te anomalies for the embedded SSTA submodel are calculated from a historical data-based empirical procedure in terms of sea level (SL) anomalies simulated from the OGCM. An inverse modeling approach is first adopted to estimate Te anomalies from the SSTA equation using observed SST and simulated upper-ocean currents from the OGCM. A relationship between Te and SL anomalies is then obtained by utilizing an empirical orthogonal function (EOF) analysis technique. The empirical Te parameterization optimally leads to a better balanced depiction of the subsurface effect on SST variability by the mean upwelling of anomalous subsurface temperature and vertical mixing in the equatorial Pacific. As compared with a standard OGCM simulation, SSTA simulations from the embedded submodel exhibit more realistic variability, with significantly increased correlation and reduced SSTA errors due to the optimized empirical Te parameterization. In the Niño-3 region (5°S–5°N, 150°–90°W), the anomaly correlation and root-mean-square (RMS) error of the simulated SST anomalies for the period 1963–96 from the standard OGCM are 0.74° and 0.58°C, while from the embedded SSTA submodel they are 0.94° and 0.29°C in the Te-dependent experiment, and 0.86° and 0.41°C in the experiment with one-dependent-year data excluded, respectively. Cross validation and sensitivity experiments to training periods for building the Te parameterization are made to illustrate the robustness and effectiveness of the approach. Moreover, the impact on simulations of SST anomalies and El Niño are examined in hybrid coupled atmosphere–ocean models (HCMs) consisting of the OGCM and a statistical atmospheric wind stress anomaly model that is constructed from a singular value decomposition (SVD) analysis. Results from coupled runs with and without embedding the SSTA submodel are compared. It is demonstrated that incorporating the embedded SSTA submodel in the context of an OGCM has a significant impact on performance of the HCMs and the behavior of the coupled system, with more realistic simulations of interannual SST anomalies (e.g., the amplitude and structure) in the tropical Pacific.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Veeshan Narinesingh ◽  
James Booth ◽  
Spencer Clark ◽  
Yi Ming

<p>Atmospheric blocking can have important impacts on weather hazards, but the fundamental dynamics of blocking are not yet fully understood. As such, this work investigates the influence of topography on atmospheric blocking in terms of dynamics, spatial frequency, duration and displacement. Using an idealized GCM, an aquaplanet integration, and integrations with topography are analyzed. Block-centered composites show midlatitude aquaplanet blocks exhibit similar wave activity flux behavior to those observed in reality, whereas high-latitude blocks do not. The addition of topography significantly increases blocking and determines distinct regions where blocks are most likely to occur. These regions are found near high-pressure anomalies in the stationary waves and near storm track exit regions. Focusing on block duration, blocks originating near topography are found to last longer than those that are formed without or far from topography but have qualitatively similar evolutions in terms of nearby geopotential height anomalies and wave activity fluxes in composites.  Integrations with two mountains have greater amounts of blocking compared to the single mountain case, however, the longitudinal spacing between the mountains is important for how much blocking occurs. Comparison between integrations with longitudinally long and short ocean basins show that more blocking occurs when storm track exits spatially overlap with high-pressure maxima in stationary waves. These results have real-world implications, as they help explain the differences in blocking between the Northern and Southern Hemisphere, and the differences between the Pacific and Atlantic regions in the Northern Hemisphere.</p>


2014 ◽  
Vol 15 (3) ◽  
pp. 1255-1273 ◽  
Author(s):  
Hailan Wang ◽  
Siegfried Schubert ◽  
Randal Koster ◽  
Yoo-Geun Ham ◽  
Max Suarez

Abstract This study compares the extreme heat and drought that developed over the United States in 2011 and 2012 with a focus on the role of sea surface temperature (SST) forcing. Experiments with the NASA Goddard Earth Observing System, version 5 (GEOS-5), atmospheric general circulation model show that the winter/spring response over the United States to the Pacific SST is remarkably similar for the two years despite substantial differences in the tropical Pacific SST. As such, the pronounced winter and early spring temperature differences between the two years (warmth confined to the south in 2011 and covering much of the continent in 2012) primarily reflect differences in the contributions from the Atlantic and Indian Oceans, with both acting to cool the east and upper Midwest during 2011, while during 2012 the Indian Ocean reinforced the Pacific-driven, continental-wide warming and the Atlantic played a less important role. During late spring and summer of 2011, the tropical Pacific SST forced a continued warming and drying over the southern United States, though considerably weaker than observed. Nevertheless, the observed 2011 anomalies fall well within the model’s intraensemble spread. In contrast, the observed rapid development of intense heat and drying over the central United States during June and July 2012 falls on the margins of the model’s intraensemble spread, with the response to the SST giving little indication that 2012 would produce record-breaking precipitation deficits and heat. A diagnosis of the 2012 observed circulation anomalies shows that the most extreme heat and drought was tied to the development of a stationary Rossby wave and an associated anomalous upper-tropospheric high maintained by weather transients.


2007 ◽  
Vol 20 (4) ◽  
pp. 765-771 ◽  
Author(s):  
Markus Jochum ◽  
Clara Deser ◽  
Adam Phillips

Abstract Atmospheric general circulation model experiments are conducted to quantify the contribution of internal oceanic variability in the form of tropical instability waves (TIWs) to interannual wind and rainfall variability in the tropical Pacific. It is found that in the tropical Pacific, along the equator, and near 25°N and 25°S, TIWs force a significant increase in wind and rainfall variability from interseasonal to interannual time scales. Because of the stochastic nature of TIWs, this means that climate models that do not take them into account will underestimate the strength and number of extreme events and may overestimate forecast capability.


2008 ◽  
Vol 21 (18) ◽  
pp. 4647-4663 ◽  
Author(s):  
Benjamin A. Cash ◽  
Xavier Rodó ◽  
James L. Kinter

Abstract Recent studies arising from both statistical analysis and dynamical disease models indicate that there is a link between incidence of cholera, a paradigmatic waterborne bacterial disease (WBD) endemic to Bangladesh, and the El Niño–Southern Oscillation (ENSO). However, a physical mechanism explaining this relationship has not yet been established. A regionally coupled, or “pacemaker,” configuration of the Center for Ocean–Land–Atmosphere Studies atmospheric general circulation model is used to investigate links between sea surface temperature in the central and eastern tropical Pacific and the regional climate of Bangladesh. It is found that enhanced precipitation tends to follow winter El Niño events in both the model and observations, providing a plausible physical mechanism by which ENSO could influence cholera in Bangladesh. The enhanced precipitation in the model arises from a modification of the summer monsoon circulation over India and Bangladesh. Westerly wind anomalies over land to the west of Bangladesh lead to increased convergence in the zonal wind field and hence increased moisture convergence and rainfall. This change in circulation results from the tropics-wide warming in the model following a winter El Niño event. These results suggest that improved forecasting of cholera incidence may be possible through the use of climate predictions.


2020 ◽  
Vol 33 (16) ◽  
pp. 6989-7010 ◽  
Author(s):  
Lingfeng Tao ◽  
Xiu-Qun Yang ◽  
Jiabei Fang ◽  
Xuguang Sun

AbstractObserved wintertime atmospheric anomalies over the central North Pacific associated with the Pacific decadal oscillation (PDO) are characterized by a cold/trough (warm/ridge) structure, that is, an anomalous equivalent barotropic low (high) over a negative (positive) sea surface temperature (SST) anomaly. While the midlatitude atmosphere has its own strong internal variabilities, to what degree local SST anomalies can affect the midlatitude atmospheric variability remains unclear. To identify such an impact, three atmospheric general circulation model experiments each having a 63-yr-long simulation are conducted. The control run forced by observed global SST reproduces well the observed PDO-related cold/trough (warm/ridge) structure. However, the removal of the midlatitude North Pacific SST variabilities in the first sensitivity run reduces the atmospheric response by roughly one-third. In the second sensitivity run in which large-scale North Pacific SST variabilities are mostly kept, but their frontal-scale meridional gradients are sharply smoothed, simulated PDO-related cold/trough (warm/ridge) anomalies are also reduced by nearly one-third. Dynamical diagnoses exhibit that such a reduction is primarily due to the weakened transient eddy activities that are induced by weakened meridional SST gradient anomalies, in which the transient eddy vorticity forcing plays a crucial role. Therefore, it is suggested that midlatitude North Pacific SST anomalies make a considerable (approximately one-third) contribution to the observed PDO-related cold/trough (warm/ridge) anomalies in which the frontal-scale meridional SST gradient (oceanic front) is a key player, although most of those atmospheric anomalies are determined by the SST variabilities outside of the midlatitude North Pacific.


2019 ◽  
Vol 32 (10) ◽  
pp. 2869-2885
Author(s):  
Paolo Ruggieri ◽  
Fred Kucharski ◽  
Lenka Novak

Abstract Given the recent changes in the Arctic sea ice, understanding the effects of the resultant polar warming on the global climate is of great importance. However, the interaction between the Arctic and midlatitude circulation involves a complex chain of mechanisms, which leaves state-of-the-art general circulation models unable to represent this interaction unambiguously. This study uses an idealized general circulation model to provide a process-based understanding of the sensitivity of the midlatitude circulation to the location of high-latitude warming. A simplified atmosphere is simulated with a single zonally localized midlatitude storm track, which is analogous to the storm tracks in the Northern Hemisphere. It is found that even small changes in the position of the forcing relative to that storm track can lead to very different responses in the midlatitude circulation. More specifically, it is found that heating concentrated in one region may cause a substantially stronger global response compared to when the same amount of heating is distributed across all longitudes at the same latitude. Linear interference between climatological and anomalous flow is an important component of the response, but it does not explain differences between different longitudes of the forcing. Feedbacks from atmospheric transient eddies are found to be associated with this strong response. A dependence between the climatological jet latitude and the jet response to polar surface heating is found. These results can be used to design and interpret experiments with complex state-of-the-art models targeted at Arctic–midlatitude interactions.


2017 ◽  
Vol 30 (2) ◽  
pp. 499-508 ◽  
Author(s):  
Lei Zhang ◽  
Kristopher B. Karnauskas

The effects of externally forced tropical sea surface temperature (SST) anomalies on long-term Walker circulation changes are investigated through numerical atmospheric general circulation model (AGCM) experiments. In response to the observed tropics-wide SST trend, which exhibits a prominent interbasin warming contrast (IBWC) with smaller warming in the Pacific than the Indian and Atlantic Oceans that includes a weak La Niña–like pattern in the equatorial Pacific, pronounced low-level easterly anomalies emerge over the equatorial Pacific. Through sensitivity experiments, the intensification of the Pacific trade winds (PTWs) is attributable to the IBWC, whereas the slightly enhanced zonal SST gradient within the equatorial Pacific plays a small role relative to the observed IBWC. It is further demonstrated that the greater Indian Ocean warming forces low-level easterly anomalies over the entire equatorial Pacific, while the greater tropical Atlantic warming-driven enhancement of PTWs is located over the central equatorial Pacific. In contrast to observations, a negligible IBWC emerges in the tropical SST trends of CMIP5 historical simulations due to a strong El Niño–like warming in the tropical Pacific. Lacking the observed IBWC (and the observed enhancement of the zonal SST gradient within the equatorial Pacific), the PTWs in the CMIP5 ensemble can only weaken.


2010 ◽  
Vol 23 (13) ◽  
pp. 3474-3496 ◽  
Author(s):  
Amy H. Butler ◽  
David W. J. Thompson ◽  
Ross Heikes

Abstract The steady-state extratropical atmospheric response to thermal forcing is investigated in a simple atmospheric general circulation model. The thermal forcings qualitatively mimic three key aspects of anthropogenic climate change: warming in the tropical troposphere, cooling in the polar stratosphere, and warming at the polar surface. The principal novel findings are the following: 1) Warming in the tropical troposphere drives two robust responses in the model extratropical circulation: poleward shifts in the extratropical tropospheric storm tracks and a weakened stratospheric Brewer–Dobson circulation. The former result suggests heating in the tropical troposphere plays a fundamental role in the poleward contraction of the storm tracks found in Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC)-class climate change simulations; the latter result is in the opposite sense of the trends in the Brewer–Dobson circulation found in most previous climate change experiments. 2) Cooling in the polar stratosphere also drives a poleward shift in the extratropical storm tracks. The tropospheric response is largely consistent with that found in previous studies, but it is shown to be very sensitive to the level and depth of the forcing. In the stratosphere, the Brewer–Dobson circulation weakens at midlatitudes, but it strengthens at high latitudes because of anomalously poleward heat fluxes on the flank of the polar vortex. 3) Warming at the polar surface drives an equatorward shift of the storm tracks. The storm-track response to polar warming is in the opposite sense of the response to tropical tropospheric heating; hence large warming over the Arctic may act to attenuate the response of the Northern Hemisphere storm track to tropical heating. 4) The signs of the tropospheric and stratospheric responses to all thermal forcings considered here are robust to seasonal changes in the basic state, but the amplitude and details of the responses exhibit noticeable differences between equinoctial and wintertime conditions. Additionally, the responses exhibit marked nonlinearity in the sense that the response to multiple thermal forcings applied simultaneously is quantitatively different from the sum of the responses to the same forcings applied independently. Thus the response of the model to a given thermal forcing is demonstrably dependent on the other thermal forcings applied to the model.


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