The Pacific Cold Tongue and the ENSO mode: a unified theory within the Zebiak-Cane model
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Publication date
1998-09-19
Authors
Vaart, P.C.F. van der
Dijkstra, H.A.
Jin, F.F.
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Document Type
Preprint
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Abstract
The equatorial Tropical Pacific Climate system is a delicate coupled
system in which winds driven by gradients of sea surface temperature
(SST)within the basin interact with the ocean circulation to maintain
SST gradients.This results in a time-mean state having a strong zonal
temperature contrast along the equator with an eastern cold tongue and
a western warm pool.By the same coupled processes also interannual
variability,known as El-Niño/Southern Oscillation,is present in the Pa-
cific.This variability can be attributed to an oscillatory coupled mode,
the ENSO mode,in the equatorial ocean/atmosphere system.Using a
Zebiak-Cane type intermediate coupled model,the coexistence of an east-
ern cold tongue in the annual mean state and ENSO in the Pacific climate
system are illustrated into one framework.The ENSO mode arises as a
robust oscillatory mode on a coupled mean state and becomes unstable if
the cold tongue of the mean state is sufficiently strong.The origin of this
mode,its propagation mechanism,its sensitivity to parameters and its
relation to the spatial structure of the annual mean state are considered.