Abstract

AbstractIt has been suggested that the intraseasonal sea surface temperature (SST) variability in the tropical oceans can be amplified by the diurnal cycle of SST (dSST). Here, by analyzing the global tropical moored buoy array for the first time, we find that the intraseasonal SST variability is indeed amplified by the dSST in most of the tropical oceans, especially in the Indo‐Pacific warm pool, but weakened in the equatorial cold tongues of the Pacific and Atlantic Oceans. Such a divergent response is associated with the difference in atmosphere‐ocean interaction processes over these two regions. In the warm pool region, SST responds to the intraseasonal atmospheric variability, resulting in in‐phase intraseasonal fluctuations between SST and dSST that amplify the intraseasonal SST variability. However, in the cold tongue region, SST drives the atmospheric changes, which leads to out‐of‐phase intraseasonal fluctuations between SST and dSST and thus the inhibition of the intraseasonal SST variability.

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