el niño - southern oscillation (enso)

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El Niño - Southern Oscillation (ENSO) Ocean-atmosphere interactions

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El Niño - Southern Oscillation (ENSO). Ocean-atmosphere interactions. Take away concepts and ideas. What is El Ni ño, La Niña? Trade wind and Walker circulation. What is the Southern Oscillation? Tropical ocean-atmosphere coupling. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: El Niño - Southern Oscillation  (ENSO)

El Niño - Southern Oscillation (ENSO)

Ocean-atmosphere interactions

Page 2: El Niño - Southern Oscillation  (ENSO)

Take away concepts and ideas

What is El Niño, La Niña?Trade wind and Walker circulation.What is the Southern Oscillation?Tropical ocean-atmosphere coupling. ENSO changes in: SST gradients, surface

winds, sea surface height, upwelling, productivity, thermocline depth

Why do tropical Pacific SSTs oscillate?

Page 3: El Niño - Southern Oscillation  (ENSO)

Trade winds How do they affect the tropical oceans?

Tradewinds

Hadley Cells

Page 4: El Niño - Southern Oscillation  (ENSO)

Tropical surface and subsurface temperatures

Page 5: El Niño - Southern Oscillation  (ENSO)

Tropical SSTs and rainfall

Page 6: El Niño - Southern Oscillation  (ENSO)

Tropical SSTs, Climate, & Vegetation

Papua New Guinea Coastal Peru

Page 7: El Niño - Southern Oscillation  (ENSO)

Normal State of the Pacific

Warm pool

Sea surface temperature, SST

Page 8: El Niño - Southern Oscillation  (ENSO)

El Niño State of Pacific

Warm pool shifts eastward

“El Niño is a warming of the eastern tropical Pacific”

Page 9: El Niño - Southern Oscillation  (ENSO)

SSTs and SST anomalies

Annual averageSST (°C)

SST Anomaly (°C)

SST Anomaly = SSTobs - SSTavg

Page 10: El Niño - Southern Oscillation  (ENSO)

Largest El Niños of 20th century

SST Anomaly (relative to the average state)

1982

1997

Page 11: El Niño - Southern Oscillation  (ENSO)

El Niño La Niña

Once developed, El Niños are known to shift temperature and precipitation patterns in many different regions of the world. These shifts, although varying somewhat from one El Niño to the next, are fairly consistent in the regions shaded on the map below.

Page 12: El Niño - Southern Oscillation  (ENSO)
Page 13: El Niño - Southern Oscillation  (ENSO)

Hadley circulation

Page 14: El Niño - Southern Oscillation  (ENSO)

Winds cause a general westward motion of tropical surface waters, causing the warmest waters to “pile up” at the western Pacific (western Pacific warm pool)

… and upwelling of cold waters in eastern basins

Ocean Response to Atmospheric Circulation

Warm pool

Page 15: El Niño - Southern Oscillation  (ENSO)

Trade winds How do they affect the tropical oceans?

Tradewinds

Hadley Cells

Page 16: El Niño - Southern Oscillation  (ENSO)

Tropical surface and subsurface temperatures

Page 17: El Niño - Southern Oscillation  (ENSO)

Walker circulation

Page 18: El Niño - Southern Oscillation  (ENSO)

Trade winds on the equator bring cold waters to surface

Equatorial upwelling

Page 19: El Niño - Southern Oscillation  (ENSO)

Normal Conditions

Note features:

- East-west SST- upwelling- Thermocline depth- Sea surface height- Surface pressure- trade winds

Page 20: El Niño - Southern Oscillation  (ENSO)

Hadley and Walker winds vary in phase:

when Hadley cell is strong, so is the walker circulation

Page 21: El Niño - Southern Oscillation  (ENSO)

Transition to El Niño

Note changes in

- East-west SST- upwelling- Thermocline depth- Sea surface height- Surface pressure- trade winds

Page 22: El Niño - Southern Oscillation  (ENSO)

Full El Niño conditions

What are changes in

- East-west SST- upwelling- Thermocline depth- Sea surface height- Surface pressure- trade winds

? ? ?

Page 23: El Niño - Southern Oscillation  (ENSO)

SST anomalies for 1982 and 1997 El Niño Events

Sometimes called the “warm phase”

Page 24: El Niño - Southern Oscillation  (ENSO)

SST anomalies for 1968 and 1998 La Niña Events

Sometimes called the “cool phase”

Page 25: El Niño - Southern Oscillation  (ENSO)

Warm Phase

Cold phaseCool SST

warm SST

Page 26: El Niño - Southern Oscillation  (ENSO)
Page 27: El Niño - Southern Oscillation  (ENSO)
Page 28: El Niño - Southern Oscillation  (ENSO)

Walker CirculationBritish mathematician, director general

of observations for India (formed after monsoon failure of 1877- worst famine in Indian history)

Arrived in 1904, shortly after huge famine caused by drought

Goal to predict Indian MonsoonFound that many global climate

variations, including Monsoon rains in India, were correlated with the Southern OscillationSir Gilbert Walker

Page 29: El Niño - Southern Oscillation  (ENSO)

SOI = Tahiti SLP - Darwin SLP

Page 30: El Niño - Southern Oscillation  (ENSO)

Average Climatology: 1933-1992

Tahiti

Darwin

Page 31: El Niño - Southern Oscillation  (ENSO)

+

-

**

∆SLP

Page 32: El Niño - Southern Oscillation  (ENSO)
Page 33: El Niño - Southern Oscillation  (ENSO)
Page 34: El Niño - Southern Oscillation  (ENSO)

Difference in Jan. SST between the two extreme ENSOepisodes of this century

nino3

Page 35: El Niño - Southern Oscillation  (ENSO)

Blue = Atm pressure at DarwinRed = SST anomaly for the NINO3 region

Physical coupling between the ocean and atmosphere

Page 36: El Niño - Southern Oscillation  (ENSO)

Connecting El Niño and the SO (ENSO)

The link between SO and El Niño was made convincingly by Bjerknes

Made extensive use of data gathered during 1957 (strong El Niño year)

Realized that unusual events separated by half the circumference of Earth could be linked together as parts of a huge coupled phenomenon ENSO– involving both the ocean and the atmosphere.

Prof. Jacob Bjerknes

Page 37: El Niño - Southern Oscillation  (ENSO)

General Description of ENSO Processes

Bjerknes established the empirical connection between EN and SO. He also provided a hypothesis about the mechanism that underlies our present understanding.

The key is to appreciate how odd the “normal” state is– The easterly trades drive westward currents, bringing the cold

waters of the Peru Current from the South American coast– The coriolis force turns westward surface currents poleward,

causing divergence and upwelling– The trade winds push the warm upper layer waters poleward as

well as westward, pulling the thermocline to the surface in the east

– All are due to the easterly winds, but the easterly winds are also due to temperature contrasts along the equator. Thus there are positive feedbacks to reinforce both El Niño and La Niña phases

Page 38: El Niño - Southern Oscillation  (ENSO)

A very simplified view of ocean-atm coupling

Page 39: El Niño - Southern Oscillation  (ENSO)

Why does ENSO State tend to Oscillate?Equatorial ocean dynamicsKey observations by Klaus Wyrtki in 1970’sEl Nino is preceded by a transfer of warm water

from west to eastThis transfer is thought to trigger a warm eventWhat triggers the movement of water?

– In cold phase, waters cold (and low) in east, warm (and high) in west

– Warm water from west sloshes back and overshoots equilibrium- positive feedbacks mentioned before set of El Niño conditions

Page 40: El Niño - Southern Oscillation  (ENSO)

Why does ENSO State tend to Oscillate?

Shortest Answer: Equatorial ocean dynamics

Short answer: Differing timescales of Kelvin and Rossby Wave propagation

Longer answer: The oscillation is made possible due to the asymmetry between eastward and westward oceanic motions (see 2-D Animation in notes).

Along the equator there is a relatively fast eastward motion called an equatorial Kelvin wave. Peaking somewhat off the equator are westward motions called Rossby waves. Time scale: <1 yr for the Kelvin waves to shift the warm pool eastward [once trades relax]; 2 yrs for the Rossby waves to return the warm pool to the west, to await another wind relax.

KelvinRossby

Page 41: El Niño - Southern Oscillation  (ENSO)

Here is a 3-D animation the tropical Pacific as it cycles through an El Niño then La Niña event. The surface shown is sea-level (in cm) and the surface is colored according to the SST anomalies associated with each event.

Page 42: El Niño - Southern Oscillation  (ENSO)

Prediction for Winter ‘09

“El Niño”

Page 43: El Niño - Southern Oscillation  (ENSO)

Global SST anomalies - last week

http://iridl.ldeo.columbia.edu

Q: ENSO State?

A; NormalB: El NiñoC: La Niña

Page 44: El Niño - Southern Oscillation  (ENSO)

El Niño Forecasting

Stephen E. ZebiakDirector General

International Research Institute for Climate Prediction

Mark CaneChair, DEES

Vetlesen Professor

Page 45: El Niño - Southern Oscillation  (ENSO)

What’s going to happen?

Forecasts courtesy of IRI (Lamont-Doherty)

Page 46: El Niño - Southern Oscillation  (ENSO)

ENSO Prediction “Plumes”

Page 47: El Niño - Southern Oscillation  (ENSO)

ENSO and Global Warming

Persistent El Niño?

Surface ocean warms uniformly.

Warming penetrates to thermocline.

Ocean-atm coupling sustains El Niño mode.

Persistent La Niña?

Surface ocean warms differentially; West warms more.

WEP SST warming drives convection there

Strengthens Walker Cell. Ocean-atm coupling

sustains La Niña mode.

Still no consensus