Slow slosh of warm water across Pacific hints El Niño is brewing
NOAA,
24
April, 2014
The
El Niño / La Niña climate pattern that alternately warms and cools
the eastern tropical Pacific is the 800-pound gorilla of Earth’s
climate system. On a global scale, no other single phenomenon has a
greater influence on whether a year will be warmer, cooler, wetter,
or drier than average. Naturally, then, the ears of seasonal
forecasters and natural resource managers around the world perked up
back in early March when NOAA’s Climate Prediction Center issued
an “El Niño Watch.”
The
“watch” means that oceanic and atmospheric conditions in the
tropical Pacific Ocean are favorable for the development of El
Niño within
the next six months. These maps reveal one of the most significant of
those favorable signs: a deep pool of warm water sliding eastward
along the equator since late January.
The
maps show a cross-sectional view of five-day-average temperature in
the top 300 meters* of the Pacific Ocean in mid-February, mid-March,
and mid-April 2014 compared to the long-term average
(1981-2010). (Mouse
over tabs below the image to see different dates.)Warmer
than average waters are red; cooler than average waters are blue.
Each map represents a 5-day average centered on the date shown.
The
pool of warm water was lurking in the western Pacific in
mid-February, but it shifted progressively eastward in the subsequent
two months. By mid-April, the unusually warm water was close to
breaching the surface in the eastern Pacific off South America. NOAA
declares El Niño underway when the monthly average temperature in
the eastern Pacific is 0.5° Celsius or more above average.
Such
warm surface waters are unusual in the eastern Pacific because the
prevailing wind direction across the tropics is east to west: from
South America to Indonesia. The easterly winds pile up sun-warmed
surface waters in the western Pacific like gusty winds build snow
into drifts. Average sea level is literally higher in the western
Pacific than the eastern Pacific.
As
the warm surface water is pushed westward by the prevailing winds,
cool water from deeper in the ocean rises to the surface near South
America. This temperature gradient—warm waters around Indonesia and
cooler waters off South America—lasts only as long as the easterly
winds are blowing.
If
those winds go slack or reverse direction in the western Pacific, the
warm pool of water around Indonesia is released and begins a slow
slosh back toward South America. The slosh is called a Kelvin wave.
If the Kelvin wave has a strong impact on the surface waters in the
central and eastern Pacific, then it can help change the atmospheric
circulation and trigger a cascade of climatic side effects that
reverberate across the globe.
Will
the odds of an El Niño event increase or decrease as summer arrives?
How can one climate pattern have such a powerful effect on weather
far away? For answers to these and other questions, keep an eye out
for a new blog planned for launch on Climate.gov in coming weeks.
Produced by scientists from NOAA’s Climate Prediction Center and
the International Research Institute for Climate and Society, the
blog will follow the developing El Niño from the perspective of
scientists at the United States’ operational climate prediction
center.
*The
surface map part of this image and the ocean depth part are not to
relative scale. The Pacific Ocean is thousands of kilometers across
at the equator. If we showed the sub-surface temperature anomaly data
at that scale, 300 meters of depth would not even occupy a single row
of pixels in the image!
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