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contributor authorHoerling, Martin P.
contributor authorKumar, Arun
contributor authorXu, Taiyi
date accessioned2017-06-09T15:56:52Z
date available2017-06-09T15:56:52Z
date copyright2001/03/01
date issued2001
identifier issn0894-8755
identifier otherams-5723.pdf
identifier urihttp://onlinelibrary.yabesh.ir/handle/yetl/4197545
description abstractAnalysis of a suite of atmospheric GCM experiments for 1950?94 shows that both the tropical and the extratropical wintertime climate respond nonlinearly with respect to opposite phases of ENSO. Such behavior is found to be reproducible among four different GCMs studied and confirms that several observed asymmetries in wintertime anomalies with respect to ENSO phases are symptomatic of nonlinearity rather than sampling error. Nonlinearity in the tropical Pacific rainfall response is related to an SST threshold for convection that leads to saturation at modestly cold SST forcing but a linear increase for warmer SST forcing. A spatial shift in the rainfall response is also a feature of the various GCMs? nonlinear behavior, that is, accentuated by the large zonal gradient of climatological SSTs across the equatorial Pacific and the fact that convection responds to the total rather than the anomalous SST. Regarding upper-tropospheric teleconnection responses over the Pacific?North American region, nonlinearity exists in both the strength of the midlatitude response and its spatial phase. The four GCMs are found to be unanimous in having a 500-mb height response whose amplitude is roughly double for extreme warm tropical Pacific SSTs as compared with extreme cold SST forcing. The longitudinal phase of the GCMs? teleconnections is also shifted eastward during warm events as compared with cold events, though this displacement is smaller than that observed. Further analysis of model simulations reveals that nonlinearity in climate responses emerges mainly for stronger ENSO events, and a predominantly linear response is found for weaker tropical Pacific SST forcing. In particular, climate simulations using both realistic and idealized SSTs indicate that tropical Pacific SST anomalies greater than one standard deviation of the interannual variation are required for initiating an appreciable nonlinear climate response.
publisherAmerican Meteorological Society
titleRobustness of the Nonlinear Climate Response to ENSO’s Extreme Phases
typeJournal Paper
journal volume14
journal issue6
journal titleJournal of Climate
identifier doi10.1175/1520-0442(2001)014<1277:ROTNCR>2.0.CO;2
journal fristpage1277
journal lastpage1293
treeJournal of Climate:;2001:;volume( 014 ):;issue: 006
contenttypeFulltext


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