Two Types of El Niño Events: Cold Tongue El Niño and Warm Pool El Niño
Citations Over TimeTop 1% of 2008 papers
Abstract
Abstract In this study, two types of El Niño events are classified based on spatial patterns of the sea surface temperature (SST) anomaly. One is the cold tongue (CT) El Niño, which can be regarded as the conventional El Niño, and the other the warm pool (WP) El Niño. The CT El Niño is characterized by relatively large SST anomalies in the Niño-3 region (5°S–5°N, 150°–90°W), while the WP El Niño is associated with SST anomalies mostly confined to the Niño-4 region (5°S–5°N, 160°E–150°W). In addition, spatial patterns of many atmospheric and oceanic variables are also distinctively different for the two types of El Niño events. Furthermore, the difference in the transition mechanism between the two types of El Niño is clearly identified. That is, the discharge process of the equatorial heat content associated with the WP El Niño is not efficient owing to the spatial structure of SST anomaly; as a result, it cannot trigger a cold event. It is also demonstrated that zonal advective feedback (i.e., zonal advection of mean SST by anomalous zonal currents) plays a crucial role in the development of a decaying SST anomaly associated with the WP El Niño, while thermocline feedback is a key process during the CT El Niño.
Related Papers
- → El Niño and La Niña—equatorial Pacific thermocline depth and sea surface temperature anomalies, 1986–98(2001)41 cited
- → Estimation of subsurface vertical thermal structure from sea surface temperature(2012)1 cited
- → Horizontal Advection of Temperature in the Seasonal Thermocline during JASIN 1978(1980)6 cited
- → Distinct Evolution of Sea Surface Temperature over the Cold Tongue Region in South China Sea during Various El Niño Events(2021)