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A sub-seasonal oscillation of sea surface temperature in the Southern Indian Ocean during DJF and its excitation mechanism.

Authors :
Zi, Yucheng
Xiao, Ziniu
Lu, Gaopeng
Xu, Jingjing
Source :
Climate Dynamics. Nov2022, p1-19.
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

Southern Indian Ocean dipole (SIOD) is a dipole SST anomaly in the Southern Indian Ocean that plays an important role in tropical climate variability. However, previous studies focused on the interannual and interdecadal scales. In this paper, the characteristics on sub-seasonal scale of SIOD are revealed from December to February (DJF) based on the ERA-Interim reanalysis dataset, and the excitation mechanisms of SIOD are also discussed. The results show that the two dominant modes of SST in the Southern Indian Ocean are the spatial distribution of Southwest-Northeast direction dipole (SIOD) and triple (SIOT) respectively, which has obvious period of quasi 50–60 days. Moreover, the intensity and zonal oscillation of the Mascarene high are conducive to the formation of SIOD (SIOT). The air–sea interaction during the formation process is composed of three stages. In the first stage the atmospheric forces the ocean to result in the Mascarene high westward (eastward) and enhances the abnormal anticyclone in the Southern Indian Ocean. There are abnormal northerly (southerly) flows on the west (east) sides of the abnormal anticyclone respectively, which weakens (enhances) the southeast trade wind in the climatology. The surface latent heat flux release decreases (increases) and SST is warmed (cooled). During the following stage, the ocean feedback the atmosphere. The warm SST continues to increase, resulting in low-level convective enhancement, which weakens the abnormal anticyclone. The third stage is again the atmosphere forcing the ocean. The abnormal anticyclone gradually turns into an abnormal cyclone and the meridional wind direction is reversed. The release of the latent heat flux increases (decreases) significantly which leads to the cooling (warming) of SST on the west (east) sides of an abnormal cyclone. In addition, the formation and extinction of SIOT are easier affected by the southern annular mode (SAM) than SIOD. The abnormal zonal wave train with wavenumber 4 (3) propagates the Southern Indian Ocean by the westerly jet waveguide and results in an SST anomaly of SIOD (SIOT), accompanied by an obvious sub-seasonal meridional variation of the precipitation in Southern Africa. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
09307575
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Climate Dynamics
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
160015720
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1007/s00382-022-06538-0