|
Subscriber Access to Full Article (Nonsubscribers may purchase for $9.00, Includes print PDF, file size: 1545077 bytes)
JOURNAL OF GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH,
VOL. 109,
C11009,
doi:10.1029/2004JC002442,
2004
Tropical Pacific decadal variability and ENSO amplitude modulation in a CGCM
Sang-Wook Yeh
Center for Ocean-Land-Atmosphere Studies, Calverton, Maryland, USA
Ben P. Kirtman
Center for Ocean-Land-Atmosphere Studies, Calverton, Maryland, USA
Abstract
Connections between decadal changes in the tropical Pacific mean state and El Niño–Southern Oscillation (ENSO) decadal modulation
are examined using three runs of a coupled general circulation model (CGCM). The differences between the three simulations,
i.e., a standard coupled model (one AGCM is coupled to a single OGCM) and two interactive ensemble models (six or twelve AGCMs
are coupled to a single OGCM), are confined to the amplitude of internal atmospheric variability. All three simulations have
the same tropical Pacific basin scale SST mode that dominates the low-frequency variability, which is identified by the first
EOF mode. This low-frequency mode is largely independent of the simulated ENSO and is neither a residual of the decadal ENSO
modulation nor does it produce any low-frequency modulation of ENSO. The analysis presented here suggests that this low-frequency
mode is stochastically driven by atmosphere noise. There are, however, low-frequency changes in the tropical Pacific mean
state that are connected to ENSO decadal modulation. The mean state associated with ENSO amplitude has different structures
in the SST and wind stress anomalies than does the dominant tropical Pacific mean state identified by the first EOF. The tropical
Pacific mean state that is unambiguously associated with ENSO decadal modulation, which is remarkably similar to the second
EOF SST mode in two interactive ensemble models, but is difficult to detect in a standard coupled model simulation. These
results argue that there is a component of ENSO variability that cannot be explained by a linear, damped and stochastically
forced process.
Received 18
April
2004;
accepted 15
September
2004;
published 18
November
2004.
Keywords: ENSO decadal modulation;
low-frequency changes;
tropical Pacific.
Index Terms: 1620 Global Change: Climate dynamics (3309); 3339 Meteorology and Atmospheric Dynamics: Ocean/atmosphere interactions (0312, 4504); 4215 Oceanography: General: Climate and interannual variability (3309).
Subscriber Access to Full Article (Nonsubscribers may purchase for $9.00, Includes print PDF, file size: 1545077 bytes)
Citation: Yeh, S.-W., and B. P. Kirtman
(2004),
Tropical Pacific decadal variability and ENSO amplitude modulation in a CGCM,
J. Geophys. Res.,
109,
C11009,
doi:10.1029/2004JC002442.
Copyright 2004 by the American Geophysical Union.
|