## Abstract The sensitivities of the Asian summer monsoon to sea‐surface temperature (SST) anomalies in the equatorial Indian Ocean and the western Pacific are compared in three different general circulation models (ARPÈGE, ECHAM, UGAMP). The impacts to idealized anomalies of 1 K show common featur
Post-monsoon sea surface temperature and convection anomalies over Indian and Pacific Oceans
✍ Scribed by C. A. Babu; P. V. Joseph
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 2002
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 294 KB
- Volume
- 22
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0899-8418
- DOI
- 10.1002/joc.729
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
✦ Synopsis
Abstract
We have studied sea surface temperature (SST) anomalies over the Indian and Pacific Oceans (domain 25 °S to 25 °N and 40 °E to 160 °W) during the three seasons following the Indian summer monsoon for wet monsoons and also for dry monsoons accompanied or not by El Niño. A dry monsoon is followed by positive SST anomalies in the longitude belt 40 to 120 °E, negative anomalies in 120 to 160 °E and again positive anomalies east of 160 °E. In dry monsoons accompanied by El Niño the anomalies have the same sign, but are much stronger. Wet monsoons have weak anomalies of opposite sign in all three of the longitude belts. Thus El Niño and a dry monsoon have the same types of association with the Indian and Pacific Ocean SSTs.
In the sector 40 to 120 °E SST anomalies first appear over the western part of the Indian Ocean (June to September) followed by the same sign of anomalies over its eastern part and China Sea (October to March). By March after a dry monsoon or El Niño the Indian Ocean between 10 °N and 10 °S has a spatially large warm SST anomaly. Anomalies in deep convection tend to follow the SST anomalies, with warm SST anomalies producing positive convection anomalies around the seasonal location of the intertropical convergence zone. Copyright © 2002 Royal Meteorological Society.
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