dc.description.abstract |
The boreal winter extratropical response to tropical heating associated with a
significant El Niño Southern Oscillation (ENSO) event has been understood primarily in
terms of a seasonal average. However, the development and variability of the response
forced by a highly sub-seasonally variable atmospheric forcing is still unclear.
Significant modes of sub-seasonal tropical convective variability exist that have welldocumented
transient impacts on the extratropics, e.g. the Madden-Julian Oscillation
(MJO). Does sub-seasonal tropical convective variability impact the seasonal mean
extratropical response? If so, what matters for the response: short-lived strong events or
more persistent moderate events? Does sub-seasonal convective variability have
implications for predictability during El Niño?
Using the Community Atmospheric Model v. 4.0 (CAM4) of the National Center
for Atmospheric Research, the response to ENSO is simulated using large ensembles of
seasonal integrations forced with observed SST from multiple El Niño events. We decompose the diabatic heating rate (Q) across the tropical Indo-Pacific in terms of
temporal and intra-ensemble variability. We then repeat the simulations by prescribing
subsets of Q in an effort to diagnose the impact of sub-seasonal and intra-ensemble Q
variability.
Neglecting sub-seasonal Q variability has a systematic impact on the response,
generally extending the Pacific jet and deepening upper-level heights across the North
Pacific. A local enhancement is simulated in tropical upper-level divergence, likely
related to the vertical redistribution of Q resulting from averaging together vertical
profiles associated with moderate and deep convection. Persistence may also play a role.
When prescribing nearly all Q variability (for frequencies greater than one day),
we find that Q-circulation coupling is locally unimportant, i.e. the temporal evolution,
mean, and variance of upper-level divergence from a coupled control simulation are
reproducible. However, interestingly the amplification of the extratropical response to El
Niño is still simulated. It follows that these differences are attributed to the neglect of
tropical-extratropical two-way coupling. This is the primary finding of the study and
suggests that the extratropical response to a significant El Niño event is not simply a
forced response to tropical heating.
Regarding the variability of the response to El Niño, we find a robust relationship
in the seasonal mean ensemble spread, linking Q variations in the west/central tropical
Pacific and extratropical fluctuations projecting onto the Arctic Oscillation (AO). This
mode accounts for about a third of the ensemble spread (in 200 hPa geopotential height).
Previous studies have revealed a similar relationship in observed interannual variability and have simulated the tropically forced component. In CAM4, this relationship in the
ensemble spread is only evident during El Niño and is the dominant contributor to the
enhanced ensemble spread simulated during El Niño, acting to lower predictability of the
response. Extratropical forcing of the tropics is important for this mode, as prescribing Q
variability weakens the relationship and cannot reproduce the enhancement in spread.
We find that this relationship emerges as residue of a low frequency sub-seasonal
tropical-extratropical coupled mode for which a significant extratropical influence is
evident. Over the Pacific, coherent interaction is simulated between evolving persistent
planetary waves and convectively coupled waves bearing a resemblance to equatorial
Kelvin waves or MJO-like behavior. We hypothesize that the two-way tropicalextratropical
interaction for this mode acts to weaken the extratropical response to El Niño. |
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