On Weak Zonally Symmetric ENSO Atmospheric Heating and the Strong Zonally Symmetric ENSO Air Temperature Response

Allan J. Clarke Department of Oceanography, The Florida State University, Tallahassee, Florida

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Kwang-Y. Kim Department of Meteorology, The Florida State University, Tallahassee, Florida

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Abstract

Observations show that regions of anomalous deep convective El Niño–Southern Oscillation (ENSO) heating tend to be balanced by anomalous ENSO cooling elsewhere so that, averaged around the globe from (say) 10°S to 10°N, the net anomalous heating is nearly zero. The zonally symmetric heating is weak because it is approximately proportional to vertical velocity that, when averaged over a constant pressure surface S around the earth from 10°S to 10°N, is nearly zero. The horizontally averaged vertical velocity over S is small because the net horizontal geostrophic convergent flow across 10°S and 10°N is zero.

Although the zonally symmetric ENSO heating is weak, the observed ENSO tropospheric air temperature anomaly has a large zonally symmetric component. Past work has shown that with weak momentum and thermal damping, Kelvin and Rossby waves can travel around the earth without significant loss of amplitude so that a zonally symmetric response is favored. This physical interpretation depends on knowing temperature and momentum anomaly damping times over the depth of the troposphere. Such times are not well known. Here a Gill tropical atmospheric model is generalized to include realistic surface friction and so theoretically estimate a frictional spindown time. Using this spindown time (approximately 3 weeks), together with an estimate of the Newtonian cooling time (1 month) the authors show, in agreement with observations, that the extremely weak zonally symmetric heating anomaly generates a symmetric air temperature anomaly comparable to the asymmetric one.

Corresponding author address: Allan J. Clarke, Dept. of Oceanography, The Florida State University, Tallahassee, FL 32306. Email: clarke@ocean.fsu.edu

Abstract

Observations show that regions of anomalous deep convective El Niño–Southern Oscillation (ENSO) heating tend to be balanced by anomalous ENSO cooling elsewhere so that, averaged around the globe from (say) 10°S to 10°N, the net anomalous heating is nearly zero. The zonally symmetric heating is weak because it is approximately proportional to vertical velocity that, when averaged over a constant pressure surface S around the earth from 10°S to 10°N, is nearly zero. The horizontally averaged vertical velocity over S is small because the net horizontal geostrophic convergent flow across 10°S and 10°N is zero.

Although the zonally symmetric ENSO heating is weak, the observed ENSO tropospheric air temperature anomaly has a large zonally symmetric component. Past work has shown that with weak momentum and thermal damping, Kelvin and Rossby waves can travel around the earth without significant loss of amplitude so that a zonally symmetric response is favored. This physical interpretation depends on knowing temperature and momentum anomaly damping times over the depth of the troposphere. Such times are not well known. Here a Gill tropical atmospheric model is generalized to include realistic surface friction and so theoretically estimate a frictional spindown time. Using this spindown time (approximately 3 weeks), together with an estimate of the Newtonian cooling time (1 month) the authors show, in agreement with observations, that the extremely weak zonally symmetric heating anomaly generates a symmetric air temperature anomaly comparable to the asymmetric one.

Corresponding author address: Allan J. Clarke, Dept. of Oceanography, The Florida State University, Tallahassee, FL 32306. Email: clarke@ocean.fsu.edu

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