## Abstract Singular value decomposition (SVD) techniques are used to deduce a relationship between rainfall over the Caribbean basin and oppositely signed sea‐surface temperature anomalies in the Pacific and Atlantic. The analysis is done for four 3 month seasons. The first two seasons: November–J
The impact of current and possibly future sea surface temperature anomalies on the frequency of Atlantic hurricanes
✍ Scribed by T. N. KRISHNAMURTI; RICARDO CORREA-TORRES; MOJIB LATIF; GLENN DAUGHENBAUGH
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 1998
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 903 KB
- Volume
- 50
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0280-6495
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
📜 SIMILAR VOLUMES
Correlation-matrix principal components of North Atlantic sea-surface temperature anomalies for the interval 1950±1970 account for the anomalous variability observed during the interval 1972±1992 better than do similar numbers of covariancematrix principal components, regional averages, or carefully
## Abstract The relationship between the all‐India monsoon rainfall and sea‐surface temperature (SST) anomalies over different Niño regions of the equatorial Pacific Ocean have been examined from 1949 to 1995 using the full time series, as well as by grouping the seasonal rainfall and SST data acco
## Abstract A three‐layer shallow‐water model with a convection parametrization is used to study the track deflections of slow‐moving hurricanes on a β‐plane as they approach straight coastlines of different orientations with respect to north, or as they cross to a cooler or warmer body of water. I
## Abstract Experiments with the GISS general circulation model are analysed to evaluate the differential impact of the contrastingly different 1984 and 1950 sea‐surface temperature (SST) patterns on simulated precipitation over sub‐Saharan Africa. Simulations yielded significantly lower August rai
## 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