Anomalous warming in the Indian Ocean coincident with El Nino

Citation
Dp. Chambers et al., Anomalous warming in the Indian Ocean coincident with El Nino, J GEO RES-O, 104(C2), 1999, pp. 3035-3047
Citations number
39
Categorie Soggetti
Earth Sciences
Journal title
JOURNAL OF GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH-OCEANS
ISSN journal
21699275 → ACNP
Volume
104
Issue
C2
Year of publication
1999
Pages
3035 - 3047
Database
ISI
SICI code
Abstract
The TOPEX/POSEIDON altimeter has provided-further evidence that interannual warming occurs in the Indian Ocean with a frequency similar to that of El Nino in the Pacific and has yielded important clues to the dynamics driving the warming. The signal is especially strong during the 1997 El Nino. The altimeter observes long waves which move westward from the southeastern Ind ian Ocean at about the same time as westwardly wind anomalies appear in the east-central portion of the basin. The sea level peaks in the southwestern Indian Ocean and causes a sea level variation signal that is a near mirror image of El Nino in the eastern Pacific. Sea surface temperature data also show a similar correlation. An analysis of the altimeter data indicates si gnificant variability in the Indian Ocean during the 1994 and 1997 El Nino events at the first and second baroclinic Rossby wave modes. Sea surface te mperature and wind data suggest that the Indian Ocean warming has occurred during several previous El Nino events, particularly during the large event s of 1982 and 1987. Based on these observations, it is suggested that the w arming begins with wind-forced Rossby waves in the southeastern Indian Ocea n associated with the Southern Oscillation, similar to the forcing of Kelvi n waves which precede El Nino in the Pacific.