Thermodynamic controls of the Atlantic Niño

被引:0
|
作者
Hyacinth C. Nnamchi
Jianping Li
Fred Kucharski
In-Sik Kang
Noel S. Keenlyside
Ping Chang
Riccardo Farneti
机构
[1] University of Nigeria,Department of Geography
[2] College of Global Change and Earth System Science,Department of Oceanography
[3] Beijing Normal University,undefined
[4] Joint Center for Global Change Studies,undefined
[5] Earth System Physics Section,undefined
[6] Abdus Salam International Centre for Theoretical Physics,undefined
[7] School of Earth and Environmental Sciences,undefined
[8] Seoul National University,undefined
[9] Geophysical Institute,undefined
[10] University of Bergen and Bjerknes Centre for Climate Research,undefined
[11] Texas A&M University,undefined
[12] College Station,undefined
[13] Collaborative Innovation Center of Marine Science and Technology,undefined
[14] Ocean University of China,undefined
来源
关键词
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Prevailing theories on the equatorial Atlantic Niño are based on the dynamical interaction between atmosphere and ocean. However, dynamical coupled ocean-atmosphere models poorly simulate and predict equatorial Atlantic climate variability. Here we use multi-model numerical experiments to show that thermodynamic feedbacks excited by stochastic atmospheric perturbations can generate Atlantic Niño s.d. of ∼0.28±0.07 K, explaining ∼68±23% of the observed interannual variability. Thus, in state-of-the-art coupled models, Atlantic Niño variability strongly depends on the thermodynamic component (R2=0.92). Coupled dynamics acts to improve the characteristic Niño-like spatial structure but not necessarily the variance. Perturbations of the equatorial Atlantic trade winds (∼±1.53 m s−1) can drive changes in surface latent heat flux (∼±14.35 W m−2) and thus in surface temperature consistent with a first-order autoregressive process. By challenging the dynamical paradigm of equatorial Atlantic variability, our findings suggest that the current theories on its modelling and predictability must be revised.
引用
收藏
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] The Atlantic Niño Mode: A Thermodynamic or a Dynamic Phenomenon?
    Eusebi Borzelli, Gian Luca
    Carniel, Sandro
    Carniel, Cosimo Enrico
    Russo, Aniello
    JOURNAL OF GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH-OCEANS, 2024, 129 (06)
  • [2] Thermodynamic controls of the Atlantic Nino
    Nnamchi, Hyacinth C.
    Li, Jianping
    Kucharski, Fred
    Kang, In-Sik
    Keenlyside, Noel S.
    Chang, Ping
    Farneti, Riccardo
    NATURE COMMUNICATIONS, 2015, 6
  • [3] The Roles of the Eastern Atlantic Niño and Central Atlantic Niño in ENSO Prediction
    Gan, Yuzhi
    Shen, Xingchen
    Jin, Yishuai
    Rao, Zhengxiang
    Pang, Yiqun
    Huang, Shouyou
    ATMOSPHERE, 2024, 15 (12)
  • [4] The Atlantic Niño weakens
    Anna-Lena Deppenmeier
    Nature Climate Change, 2022, 12 : 780 - 781
  • [5] Multi-Time Scale Variations in Atlantic Niño and a Relative Atlantic Niño Index
    Tan, Wei
    Liu, Yunyun
    Li, Xiaofan
    Johnson, Nathaniel C.
    Hu, Zeng-Zhen
    GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH LETTERS, 2023, 50 (24)
  • [6] Emergence of the Central Atlantic Niño
    Zhang L.
    Wang C.
    Han W.
    McPhaden M.J.
    Hu A.
    Xing W.
    Science Advances, 2023, 9 (43)
  • [7] Atlantic Warming Enhances the Influence of Atlantic Niño on ENSO
    Wang, Ran
    He, Jiaying
    Luo, Jing-Jia
    Chen, Lin
    GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH LETTERS, 2024, 51 (08)
  • [8] Unveiling the role of South Tropical Atlantic in winter Atlantic Niño inducing La Niña
    Zhang, Guangli
    Chen, Jiepeng
    Fan, Hanjie
    Zhang, Lei
    Chen, Mengyan
    Wang, Xin
    Wang, Dongxiao
    NATURE COMMUNICATIONS, 2025, 16 (01)
  • [9] Uncertainty on Atlantic Niño Variability Projections
    Prigent, A.
    Koungue, R. A. Imbol
    Nkwinkwa, A. S. N. Imbol
    Beobide-Arsuaga, G.
    Farneti, R.
    GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH LETTERS, 2023, 50 (24)
  • [10] The cause of the fragile relationship between the Pacific El Niño and the Atlantic Niño
    Ping Chang
    Yue Fang
    R. Saravanan
    Link Ji
    Howard Seidel
    Nature, 2006, 443 : 324 - 328