Significant Atmospheric Nonlinearities in the ENSO Cycle
- 15 July 2009
- journal article
- Published by American Meteorological Society in Journal of Climate
- Vol. 22 (14) , 4014-4028
- https://doi.org/10.1175/2009jcli2716.1
Abstract
The nonlinearities that cause El Niño events to deviate more from the mean state than La Niña events are still not completely understood. This paper investigates the contribution of one candidate mechanism: ENSO nonlinearities originating from the atmosphere. The initially linear intermediate complexity model of the equatorial Pacific Ocean, in which all couplings were fitted to observations, describes the ENSO cycle reasonably well. In this linear model, extra terms are systematically introduced in the atmospheric component: the nonlinear response of mean wind stress to SST anomalies, the skewness of the driving noise term in the atmosphere, and the relation of this noise term to the background SST or the ENSO phase. The nonlinear response of mean wind stress to SST in the ENSO region is found to be the dominant term influencing the ENSO cycle. However, this influence is only visible when noise fields are used that are fitted to observed patterns of prescribed standard deviation and spatial decorrelation. Standard deviation and skewness of noise do have a dependence on the ENSO phase, but this has a relatively small influence on the ENSO cycle in this model. With these additional nonlinearities in the representation of the atmosphere, a step forward has been made toward building a realistic reduced complexity model for ENSO.Keywords
This publication has 22 references indexed in Scilit:
- Probability distribution of sea surface wind stressesGeophysical Research Letters, 2008
- Quantifying the Dependence of Westerly Wind Bursts on the Large-Scale Tropical Pacific SSTJournal of Climate, 2007
- Shifts in ENSO coupling processes under global warmingGeophysical Research Letters, 2006
- Westerly Wind Bursts: ENSO’s Tail Rather than the Dog?Journal of Climate, 2005
- El Niño in a changing climate: a multi-model studyOcean Science, 2005
- The ERA‐40 re‐analysisQuarterly Journal of the Royal Meteorological Society, 2005
- Multiplicative Noise and Non-Gaussianity: A Paradigm for Atmospheric Regimes?Journal of the Atmospheric Sciences, 2005
- On the Impact of Local Feedbacks in the Central Pacific on the ENSO CycleJournal of Climate, 2003
- Balanced Ocean-Data Assimilation near the EquatorJournal of Physical Oceanography, 2002
- Assimilation of Subsurface Thermal Data into a Simple Ocean Model for the Initialization of an Intermediate Tropical Coupled Ocean-Atmosphere Forecast ModelMonthly Weather Review, 1995