Abstract
Abstract The sea surface temperature anomalies (SSTA) in the Maritime Continent (MC) region are mainly related to local variability, ENSO, and the Indian Ocean dipole. Using the reanalysis data from NOAA and NCEP–NCAR, by employing the empirical orthogonal function (EOF) analysis, we have explored the principal mode of ENSO-independent summertime SSTA in the MC and its associations with regional climate anomalies. After ENSO signals have been removed, the leading mode of SSTA in the MC exhibits a uniformly signed pattern, which mainly varies on an interannual time scale. The maintenance mechanisms of the ENSO-independent SSTA are different in different subregions, especially over the region south of Java and the tropical northwestern Pacific. When the time coefficient of the first leading EOF mode (EOF1) is positive, warmer SSTAs are observed in the area south of Java. The oceanic dynamic heating there facilitates the warmer SSTA. Thus, the Gill-type response of the atmosphere is found over the region south of Java. The diabatic cooling in the atmosphere is dominant over the tropical northwestern Pacific where the warmer SSTA is maintained by the absorption of solar radiation due to less cloud cover there. A tilted vertical circulation is hence formed, linking the tropical southeastern Indian Ocean with the tropical northwestern Pacific. The anomalous circulations in the Asian–Australian monsoon region are affected by this ENSO-independent SSTA mode, resulting in decreased summer rainfall anomaly in the region near the southeast coast of China and increased winter precipitation anomaly over the extratropical region of Australia.
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