Abstract

AbstractPositive/negative Indian Ocean Dipole (IOD) tends to co‐occur with El Niño/La Niña. Five positive IODs, however, are observed under La Niña condition in 1961, 1966, 1967, 2007, and 2011. This study uses the monthly ocean temperature and atmospheric reanalysis datasets from ECMWF to investigate how these positive IOD events occurred. It is found that the five positive IODs are consistently accompanied by a moderately strong positive subsurface IOD (Sub‐IOD) event that initiated earlier. The Sub‐IOD‐related oceanic dynamical processes including oceanic Kelvin and Rossby waves help to promote the development of the positive IODs. More specifically, the equatorial easterly anomalies in the Tropical Indian Ocean (TIO) that are crucial for the development of the positive Sub‐IODs and IODs in 1961/2011 are triggered by an anticyclonic curl over South Indian Ocean that is induced by a Southern Hemispheric Indian Ocean Subtropical Dipole mode. The crucial equatorial easterly anomalies in 1967 are triggered by a thermocline warming in the southwestern TIO induced by westward downwelling oceanic Rossby waves, while in 1966/2007, the equatorial easterly anomalies are connected with the anomalous Walker circulation resulting from the certain sea surface temperature anomaly pattern over the equatorial Pacific. On the other hand, the remote effects of La Niña on TIO are relatively weaker, being overwhelmed by the above triggering processes.

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