Abstract

In the Indian Ocean basin the sea surface temperatures (SSTs) are most sensitive to changes in the oceanic depth of the thermocline in the region of the Seychelles Dome. Observational studies have suggested that the strong SST variations in this region influence the atmospheric evolution around the basin, while its impact could extend far into the Pacific and the extra-tropics. Here we study the adjustments of the coupled atmosphere-ocean system to a winter shallow doming event using dedicated ensemble simulations with the state-of-the-art EC-Earth climate model. The doming creates an equatorial Kelvin wave and a pair of westward moving Rossby waves, leading to higher SST 1–2 months later in the Western equatorial Indian Ocean. Atmospheric convection is strengthened and the Walker circulation responds with reduced convection over Indonesia and cooling of the SST in that region. The Pacific warm pool convection shifts eastward and an oceanic Kelvin wave is triggered at thermocline depth. The wave leads to an SST warming in the East Equatorial Pacific 5–6 months after the initiation of the Seychelles Dome event. The atmosphere responds to this warming with weak anomalous atmospheric convection. The changes in the upper tropospheric divergence in this sequence of events create large-scale Rossby waves that propagate away from the tropics along the atmospheric waveguides. We suggest to repeat these types of experiments with other models to test the robustness of the results. We also suggest to create the doming event in June so that the East-Pacific warming occurs in November when the atmosphere is most sensitive to SST anomalies and El Nino could possibly be triggered by the doming event under suitable conditions.

Highlights

  • Oceanic regions with a shallow thermocline play a key role in the air-sea interaction

  • We found that the influence of the shallow event extends from the Indian Ocean into the East Pacific by a chain of events during the subsequent 6–8 months

  • The atmospheric convection is enhanced east of the warm pool region and a westerly wind anomaly sets off a downwelling Kelvin wave at the edge of the Pacific Warm Pool

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Summary

Introduction

Oceanic regions with a shallow thermocline play a key role in the air-sea interaction. The SST variations in the SD region are large and impact the atmospheric stability and second, the SD thermocline is most shallow between December and June which coincides with the South-Western Indian Ocean cyclone season (Xie et al 2002; Hermes and Reason 2008). There has been some effort to investigate how variations in the SD region feed back on the atmosphere and ocean (Xie et al 2002; Annamalai et al 2005a; Lloyd and Vecchi 2010; Swapna et al 2013) but a complete study about the effects of a shallow SD thermocline event on the coupled system locally and remotely is still lacking.

Data and model
The method
Initial conditions and forcing
Simulation results
Forced phase—first two months
Equatorial adjustments
Adjustments in the Southern IO
Remote adjustments through atmospheric Rossby waves
Findings
Summary and discussion
Full Text
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