Ps. Chu et Jb. Wang, RECENT CLIMATE-CHANGE IN THE TROPICAL WESTERN PACIFIC AND INDIAN-OCEAN REGIONS AS DETECTED BY OUTGOING LONGWAVE RADIATION RECORDS, Journal of climate, 10(4), 1997, pp. 636-646
Recent climate change in tropical convection in the western Pacific an
d Indian Ocean regions is inferred from the outgoing longwave radiatio
n (OLR) records, The systematic bias in the OLR series is first correc
ted and results of the rotated empirical orthogonal function analysis
indicate that the bias, to a first approximation, has been corrected.
Linear regression analysis and nonparametric Mann-Kendall rank statist
ics are employed to detect trends, From 1974 to 1992, trend analyses b
ased on the entire consecutive monthly records suggest a significant d
ecrease in OLR over the tropical central-western Pacific and a large p
ortion of the Indian Ocean. In contrast, northern Australia shows the
largest increase in OLR over time. The significance of the local linea
r trend pattern has been determined via a Monte Carlo simulation techn
ique that scrambles OLR time series at each grid point ''simultaneousl
y'' and results show the field significance. An increase in convection
shows a preference to occur in the summer hemisphere. During the bore
al summer half-year, this is seen in a region extending from the Arabi
an Sea across southeast Asia eastward to the northwest Pacific, with t
he largest value over the Bay of: Bengal. More summer monsoon rainfall
is likely to have occurred in these regions. For the austral summer h
alf-year, enhanced convection is found over the equatorial southcentra
l Pacific and the south-central Indian Ocean. Time series of tropical
cyclone counts in the northwest Pacific, the Bay of Bengal, and the so
uth-central Indian Ocean also reveal a general level of increase. Rega
rdless of seasonality, a positive trend in OLR is always observed over
a large portion of tropical Australia. A sensitivity test is conducte
d to investigate the change in linear trend patterns by removing the y
ears during which the El Nino-Southern Oscillation phenomenon occurred
. Although the; enhanced convection over the Bay of Bengal, the south
Indian Ocean, and the northwest Pacific are still noticeable, it is mu
ch weaker over the equatorial south-central Pacific than when the comp
lete duration series were used. Other sensitivity tests are also condu
cted to examine the change in linear trend patterns by varying data le
ngths and by skipping the missing 10-month observation in the OLR time
series; results are basically similar to those when complete data are
used. The authors speculate that monsoon convection over the tropical
western Pacific and the Indian Ocean has undergone a change in the cl
imate mean state, probably on a decadal timescale.