El
Niño watch 2018
Roger
Caldwell,via Facebook
Four
days ago (9/26) a signature wind pattern appeared in the far west
equatorial Pacific that greatly increases the probability of El Niño
in the coming months. It doesn’t look like much — a small puff of
gale force wind — but the location is what matters. Just east of
the island of Papau New Guinea the waters are very vulnerable to
surface wind, as it is these small puffs that mark the beginning of a
climatic domino effect that can change the climate of nearly the
entire earth, because it is here that the direction of the equatorial
Pacific current begins its switch to an El Niño mode.
Equatorial
waters are unique on earth because it is the only place which is not
subject to coriolis forces which cause the direction of fluids to
curve clockwise or counter clockwise depending of which side of the
equator you are on. At the equator, fluids can flow straight for long
distances, resulting in large translational movements of water. The
Pacific Equator is by far the longest stretch of uninterrupted flow,
exceeding 11,500 km.
Called
a westerly “back burst”, the puff of gale force wind initiates a
subsurface Rossby wave, which is a thermal wave that propagates along
the equator from west toward the east. For the past several months
the general direction of the surface wind has been anomalously
westward, which has caused a build-up of subsurface heat across the
central Pacific Equator. When this heat exceeds a +1C anomaly, it is
a precondition for El Niño. Just before this latest back burst, the
+1C threshold was crossed, and as a result, this back burst promises
to push that anomaly significantly higher making an El Niño more
intense.
For
comparison, the 2015/16 El Niño peaked at an ocean heat content of
+1.7C, with a peak subsurface intensity of +4C. Right now, we’re at
a heat content of +1.1C, with a peak subsurface intensity of +3.5C
and this is before accounting for the effects of the most recent back
burst which has yet to be reported. (Date of subsurface heat graph
9/25/18).
What
to expect.
It
might take a couple more months for the equatorial surface water to
switch from a “neutral” mode to a “warm” mode. Once switched,
the intensity of the warm mode will depend heavily on whether or not
we have more westerly back bursts.
If no more back bursts happen,
then we can expect a relatively mild El Niño; however, if back burst
like this last one persists, then all bets are off as we could be
headed toward a new record.
The breadth of the subsurface anomaly is
very large. Even though it is not as intense, it is wider than the
15/16 event, meaning that once it forms it could last longer.
One
thing for sure is that there is no cooling in sight.
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