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Ocean atmosphere thermal decoupling in the eastern equatorial Indian ocean

Authors :
Sudheer Joseph
Weiqing Han
M. Ravichandran
B. Praveen Kumar
Raju V. Jampana
Source :
Climate Dynamics. 49:575-594
Publication Year :
2016
Publisher :
Springer Science and Business Media LLC, 2016.

Abstract

Eastern equatorial Indian ocean (EEIO) is one of the most climatically sensitive regions in the global ocean, which plays a vital role in modulating Indian ocean dipole (IOD) and El Nino southern oscillation (ENSO). Here we present evidences for a paradoxical and perpetual lower co-variability between sea-surface temperature (SST) and air-temperature (Tair) indicating instantaneous thermal decoupling in the same region, where signals of the strongly coupled variability of SST anomalies and zonal winds associated with IOD originate at inter-annual time scale. The correlation minimum between anomalies of Tair and SST occurs in the eastern equatorial Indian ocean warm pool region (≈70°E–100°E, 5°S–5°N), associated with lower wind speeds and lower sensible heat fluxes. At sub-monthly and Madden–Julian oscillation time scales, correlation of both variables becomes very low. In above frequencies, precipitation positively contributes to the low correlation by dropping Tair considerably while leaving SST without any substantial instant impact. Precipitation is led by positive build up of SST and post-facto drop in it. The strong semi-annual response of SST to mixed layer variability and equatorial waves, with the absence of the same in the Tair, contributes further to the weak correlation at the sub-annual scale. The limited correlation found in the EEIO is mainly related to the annual warming of the region and ENSO which is hard to segregate from the impacts of IOD.

Details

ISSN :
14320894 and 09307575
Volume :
49
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Climate Dynamics
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........996696264d9fb268112b6275406369dc