INTERANNUAL VARIABILITY OF DEEP CONVECTION OVER THE TROPICAL WARM POOL

Authors
Citation
Ss. Chen et Ra. Houze, INTERANNUAL VARIABILITY OF DEEP CONVECTION OVER THE TROPICAL WARM POOL, J GEO RES-A, 102(D22), 1997, pp. 25783-25795
Citations number
48
Volume
102
Issue
D22
Year of publication
1997
Pages
25783 - 25795
Database
ISI
SICI code
Abstract
Satellite data show that the total amount of deep convection was nearl y constant from year to year over the ''warm pool'' region of the trop ical Indian and Pacific oceans, but the spatial distribution varied. I n the 1986-1987 warm El Nino/Southern Oscillation event, the maximum o f deep convective activity was over the high sea surface temperature ( SST) of the west central Pacific, with a local minimum over the easter n Indian Ocean. In the 1988-1989 cold ENSO event the maximum convectiv e activity switched to the eastern Indian Ocean, with a minimum over t he west central Pacific. The SST changed very little over the eastern Indian Ocean from year to year, and the centers of convective activity were always collocated with the four-month mean low-level westerlies in each year. The latitude of the cloudy region of the intraseasonal o scillation (ISO) varied interannually. The interannual differences in deep convective activity over the warm pool were accounted for almost exclusively by the occurrence or nonoccurrence of extremely large, lon glasting, deep mesoscale cloud systems (cloud tops < 208 K with horizo ntal dimensions similar to 300-700 km). Such cloud systems occurred mo re frequently than normal over the western Pacific during the warm ENS O event and over the eastern Indian Ocean during the cold event. They occurred more frequently over the tropical eastern Indian and western Pacific oceans than over the maritime continent, thus accounting for t he seesaw pattern of the observed cold cloudiness between the two ocea nic regions on both interannual and intraseasonal timescales.