Modeling the Mechanisms of Linear and Nonlinear ENSO Responses to the Pacific Meridional Mode

JOURNAL OF CLIMATE(2016)

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摘要
Interactions between the Pacific meridional mode (PMM) and El Nino-Southern Oscillation (ENSO) are investigated using the National Center for Atmospheric Research (NCAR) Community Earth System Model (CESM) and an intermediate coupled model (ICM). The two models are configured so that the CESM simulates the PMM but not ENSO, and the ICM simulates ENSO but not the PMM, allowing for a clean separation between the PMM evolution and the subsequent ENSO response. An ensemble of CESM simulations is run with an imposed surface heat flux associated with the North Pacific Oscillation (NPO) generating a sea surface temperature (SST) and wind response representative of the PMM. The PMM wind is then applied as a forcing to the ICM to simulate the ENSO response. The positive (negative) ensemble-mean PMM wind forcing results in a warm (cold) ENSO event although the responses are not symmetric (warm ENSO events are larger in amplitude than cold ENSO events), and large variability between ensemble members suggests that any individual ENSO event is strongly influenced by natural variability contained within the CESM simulations. Sensitivity experiments show that 1) direct forcing of Kelvin waves by PMM winds dominates the ENSO response, 2) seasonality of PMM forcing and ENSO growth rates influences the resulting ENSO amplitude, 3) ocean dynamics within the ICM dominate the ENSO asymmetry, and 4) the nonlinear relationship between PMM wind anomalies and surface wind stress may enhance the La Nina response to negative PMM variations. Implications for ENSO variability are discussed.
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