Extreme swings of the South Pacific Convergence Zone and the different types of El Niño events
Borlace, Simon; Santoso, Agus; Cai, Wenju; et al.Collins, Matthew
Date: 16 July 2014
Article
Journal
Geophysical Research Letters
Publisher
American Geophysical Union (AGU) / Wiley
Publisher DOI
Abstract
There have been three extreme equatorward swings of the South Pacific Convergence Zone (SPCZ) during the satellite era. These zonal SPCZ (zSPCZ) events coincided with an El Niño of different magnitude and spatial pattern, in which strong anomalous warming reduced the off-equatorial-to-equatorial meridional sea surface temperature (SST) ...
There have been three extreme equatorward swings of the South Pacific Convergence Zone (SPCZ) during the satellite era. These zonal SPCZ (zSPCZ) events coincided with an El Niño of different magnitude and spatial pattern, in which strong anomalous warming reduced the off-equatorial-to-equatorial meridional sea surface temperature (SST) gradient near the dateline, enabling convection to shift equatorward. It is not known, given the short observational record, how and whether different types of El Niño are associated with zSPCZ events. Using perturbed physics ensembles experiments in which SST biases are reduced, we find that zSPCZ events are concurrent with notable eastern Pacific (EP) warming. Central Pacific warming alone is rarely able to produce a swing, even as the climate warms under a CO2 increase scenario. Only El Niño events with strong EP warming can shift the convective zone. Such co-occurring events are found to increase in frequency under greenhouse warming. Key Points Extreme swings of the SPCZ occur with El Niño eastern Pacific warming Extreme El Niño is not required to induce an extreme swing of the SPCZ Extreme swings occur more often with EP-type El Niño under greenhouse warming ©2014. American Geophysical Union. All Rights Reserved.
Mathematics and Statistics
Faculty of Environment, Science and Economy
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