Journal Article10.1029/2006JC003798
El Niño Modoki and its possible teleconnection
Karumuri Ashok,Karumuri Ashok,Swadhin K. Behera,Suryachandra A. Rao,Hengyi Weng,Toshio Yamagata,Toshio Yamagata +6 more
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TL;DR: In this article, the authors found that anomalous warming events different from conventional El Nino events occur in the central equatorial Pacific, where a horseshoe pattern is flanked by a colder sea surface temperature anomaly (SSTA) on both sides along the equator.
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Abstract: [1] Using observed data sets mainly for the period 1979–2005, we find that anomalous warming events different from conventional El Nino events occur in the central equatorial Pacific. This unique warming in the central equatorial Pacific associated with a horseshoe pattern is flanked by a colder sea surface temperature anomaly (SSTA) on both sides along the equator. empirical orthogonal function (EOF) analysis of monthly tropical Pacific SSTA shows that these events are represented by the second mode that explains 12% of the variance. Since a majority of such events are not part of El Nino evolution, the phenomenon is named as El Nino Modoki (pseudo-El Nino) (“Modoki” is a classical Japanese word, which means “a similar but different thing”). The El Nino Modoki involves ocean-atmosphere coupled processes which include a unique tripolar sea level pressure pattern during the evolution, analogous to the Southern Oscillation in the case of El Nino. Hence the total entity is named as El Nino–Southern Oscillation (ENSO) Modoki. The ENSO Modoki events significantly influence the temperature and precipitation over many parts of the globe. Depending on the season, the impacts over regions such as the Far East including Japan, New Zealand, western coast of United States, etc., are opposite to those of the conventional ENSO. The difference maps between the two periods of 1979–2004 and 1958–1978 for various oceanic/atmospheric variables suggest that the recent weakening of equatorial easterlies related to weakened zonal sea surface temperature gradient led to more flattening of the thermocline. This appears to be a cause of more frequent and persistent occurrence of the ENSO Modoki event during recent decades.
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Citations
Structural Changes in the Pacific–Japan Pattern in the Late 1990s
TL;DR: The Pacific-Japan (PJ) pattern as mentioned in this paper is a teleconnection that significantly influences the East Asian summer climate on various time scales, and is known as the East Asia-Pacific pattern.
Unusual IOD event of 2007
TL;DR: The positive Indian Ocean Dipole (IOD) of 2007 was associated with a pattern of sea surface temperature (SST) anomalies in which the colder seas of the Maritime Continent were flanked by the warmer central Pacific and Indian Oceans as discussed by the authors.
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Characterizing ENSO Coupled Variability and Its Impact on North American Seasonal Precipitation and Temperature
TL;DR: In this paper, seasonally varying canonical correlation analysis (CCA) between anomalies of tropical Pacific SST and outgoing longwave radiation (OLR) was used for quantifying U.S. climate impacts and the strongest regions of coupling were mostly invariant as a function of season and correspond to an OLR region located in the central Pacific Ocean (CP-OLR), and an SST region in the eastern Pacific that coincides with the Nino-3 region.
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Relationship between typhoon activity and upper ocean heat content
Akiyoshi Wada,Johnny C. L. Chan +1 more
TL;DR: A 44-year mean distribution of tropical cyclone heat potential (TCHP), a measure of the oceanic heat content from the surface to the 26°C-isotherm depth, shows that TCHP is locally high in the western North Pacific (WNP).
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Statistical Methods in the Atmospheric Sciences
Daniel S. Wilks
- 03 Jun 2011
TL;DR: The second edition of "Statistical Methods in the Atmospheric Sciences, Second Edition" as mentioned in this paper presents and explains techniques used in atmospheric data summarization, analysis, testing, and forecasting.
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