Large-Scale Air-Sea Interactions and Short-Period Climatic Fluctuations
- 20 November 1981
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS) in Science
- Vol. 214 (4523) , 869-876
- https://doi.org/10.1126/science.214.4523.869
Abstract
Research during the last 15 years has shown that there is order in large-scale air-sea interactions, so that space scales of abnormalities of the lower atmosphere's circulation and the upper oceanic thermal structure are comparable. Because of this air-sea coupling, each oceanic or atmospheric pattern can be reasonably well specified by the other. Patterns of oceanic thermal anomalies are about an order of magnitude more persistent than those of atmospheric circulations, and empirical studies have had some success in using sea surface temperature patterns in long-range weather prediction. In addition to empirical studies, efforts continue in the development of numerical-dynamical models in order to understand the complex linkages of the large-scale air-sea system.Keywords
This publication has 57 references indexed in Scilit:
- A General Circulation Experiment with a Coupled Atmosphere, Ocean and Sea Ice ModelJournal of Physical Oceanography, 1980
- Long‐range weather forecasting: Value, status, and prospectsReviews of Geophysics, 1980
- Causes of Some Extreme Northern Hemisphere Climatic Anomalies from Summer 1978 through the Subsequent WinterMonthly Weather Review, 1980
- Trends of Variables and Energy Fluxes over the Atlantic Ocean from 1948 to 19721Monthly Weather Review, 1980
- Observations of large‐scale traveling Rossby wavesReviews of Geophysics, 1979
- Design of an Oceanographic Network in the Midlatitude North PacificJournal of Physical Oceanography, 1979
- Oceanic Thermal Response to Strong Atmospheric Forcing I. Characteristics of Forcing EventsJournal of Physical Oceanography, 1978
- Pacific sea-surface temperature related to rain in CaliforniaNature, 1977
- The influence of tropical east Pacific Ocean temperatures on the atmosphereQuarterly Journal of the Royal Meteorological Society, 1972
- Short-Period Climatic FluctuationsScience, 1965