Abstract

Interannual SST variability in a coupled atmosphere–mixed layer ocean model is investigated. This model has no El Niño but shows a large interannual SST variability in the tropical Pacific. The basin-scale feature of SST variation has some common characteristics shared with that obtained by a global ocean–atmosphere coupled GCM and observational data in the subtropical to the midlatitude Pacific. Both the latent heat flux and shortwave radiation have their roles in producing the SST anomalies. There is no large contrast in the total heat flux between the eastern and the western Pacific. However, their main components, the shortwave radiation and the latent heat flux, have a remarkable contrast between the cold tongue in the east and the warm pool region in the west. In the east, the ocean is warmed by shortwave radiation and cooled by latent heat. This shortwave radiation is negatively correlated with low-level clouds. When the SST is warmer than normal in the eastern Pacific, there is less low-level stratus cloud cover and more shortwave radiation reaching the surface. In the western Pacific, the ocean is warmed by less evaporation due to weaker winds. When the ocean becomes warm, it is cooled by less shortwave radiation due to stronger activity in cumulus convection.

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