North Atlantic Atmosphere–Ocean Interaction on Intraseasonal Time Scales
- 1 April 2004
- journal article
- Published by American Meteorological Society in Journal of Climate
- Vol. 17 (8) , 1617-1621
- https://doi.org/10.1175/1520-0442(2004)017<1617:naaioi>2.0.co;2
Abstract
The authors examine wintertime atmosphere–ocean interaction on weekly time scales over the North Atlantic sector. Consistent with previous results, it is found that the strongest interactions between the ocean and atmosphere occur when the atmosphere leads. However, the authors also find a spatially coherent and statistically significant pattern of sea surface temperature anomalies over the Gulf Stream extension region that precedes changes in the leading mode of Northern Hemisphere atmospheric variablilty by ∼2 weeks. Abstract The authors examine wintertime atmosphere–ocean interaction on weekly time scales over the North Atlantic sector. Consistent with previous results, it is found that the strongest interactions between the ocean and atmosphere occur when the atmosphere leads. However, the authors also find a spatially coherent and statistically significant pattern of sea surface temperature anomalies over the Gulf Stream extension region that precedes changes in the leading mode of Northern Hemisphere atmospheric variablilty by ∼2 weeks.Keywords
This publication has 19 references indexed in Scilit:
- Understanding the Persistence of Sea Surface Temperature Anomalies in MidlatitudesJournal of Climate, 2003
- Atmospheric GCM Response to Extratropical SST Anomalies: Synthesis and Evaluation*Journal of Climate, 2002
- An interpretation of the results from atmospheric general circulation models forced by the time history of the observed sea surface temperature distributionGeophysical Research Letters, 2000
- Influence of the North Atlantic SST on the atmospheric circulationGeophysical Research Letters, 1999
- The Effective Number of Spatial Degrees of Freedom of a Time-Varying FieldJournal of Climate, 1999
- Atmosphere–Ocean Interaction on Weekly Timescales in the North Atlantic and PacificJournal of Climate, 1997
- The NCEP/NCAR 40-Year Reanalysis ProjectBulletin of the American Meteorological Society, 1996
- Impact of localized tropical and extratropical SST anomalies in ensembles of seasonal GCM integrationsQuarterly Journal of the Royal Meteorological Society, 1994
- Latent and Sensible Heat Flux Anomalies over the Northern Oceans: Driving the Sea Surface TemperatureJournal of Physical Oceanography, 1992
- Stochastic climate models, Part II Application to sea-surface temperature anomalies and thermocline variabilityTellus, 1977