Tropical Atlantic Variability

The Tropical Atlantic Variability (TAV) is influenced by internal interaction and external effects. TAV can be discussed in different time scales: seasonal (annual cycle) and interannual. tav can be discussed in different time scales:seasonal (annual cycle) and interannual.and external effects.

Annual cycle edit

Seasonal variability is the dominant time scale of TAV, which is due to the seasonal march of the Sun.[1] This seasonal variability is related to the movement of Intertropical Convergence Zone (ITCZ), which is the convergent zone of trade winds from south and north near the equator. It has strong vertical convection resulting to a redundant participation band and weak winds. The mean location of the ITCZ over the Atlantic Ocean is 5–10 degrees north of the geographical equator.[2][3] All this asymmetric of ITCZ is the ultimate cause of the annual cycle in equatorial sea surface temperature (SST) in Atlantic by maintaining southerly cross-equatorial winds that intensify in boreal summer/fall and relax in boreal spring.[4][5] From March to April, during which the temperature of the equator reaches maximum, winds are weakest and the sun shines directly over the equator. So, SST is uniformly warm near the equator, which makes the ITCZ really sensitive to even small disturbance of SST and explains the relaxation of cross-equator winds in spring. From July to September, during which the temperature of the equator reaches its minimum, ITCZ reaches its northernmost location, which explains the intensification of cross-equator winds. It can be seen that the process of cooling takes 3 months while that of warming takes 7 months, which are asymmetric. This seasonal asymmetry is due to influence of seasonal continental monsoon. Because of the narrow width of Atlantic, continental monsoon has a much more important influence on its variation compared to the wide Pacific Ocean, whose leading factor is air-sea interaction.

Interannual cycle edit

For interannual, there is one mode called Atlantic Niño, of which periodicity varies. During the Atlantic Nino event, eastern area of Atlantic will appear warm SST anomalies accompanying a relaxation of trade winds.[6] This mechanism, which is known as Bjerknes Feedback,[7] is similar to El Niño–Southern Oscillation (ENSO).

"On interannual and longer timescales, no single mode seems to dominate. Instead, several mechanisms are responsible for tropical Atlantic variability. On the equator, both observational and modeling studies indicate that there is a Bjerknes-type air–sea coupled mode arising from the interaction of the equatorial zonal SST gradient, ITCZ convection, zonal wind, and thermocline depth."[1]

References edit

  1. ^ a b "Tropical Atlantic Variability: Patterns, Mechanisms, and Impacts" (PDF). Geophysical Monograph. AGU. 2004.
  2. ^ Hastenrath, S. (1991). "Climate dynamics of the tropics". 488 pp., Kluwer Academic, Boston, USA.
  3. ^ Mitchell, T. P. & J. M. Wallace (1992). "The annual cycle in equatorial convection and sea surface temperature". Journal of Climate. 5 (10): 1140–1156. Bibcode:1992JCli....5.1140M. doi:10.1175/1520-0442(1992)005<1140:TACIEC>2.0.CO;2.
  4. ^ 4Giese, B. S., and J. A. Carton (1994). "The seasonal cycle in a coupled ocean-atmosphere model". Journal of Climate. 7 (8): 1208–1217. Bibcode:1994JCli....7.1208G. doi:10.1175/1520-0442(1994)007<1208:TSCICO>2.0.CO;2. ISSN 1520-0442.{{cite journal}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  5. ^ Xie, S.-P. (1994). "On the genesis of the equatorial annual cycle" (PDF). J. Clim. pp. 2008–2013.
  6. ^ Merle, J. "Annual and interannual variability of temperature in the eastern equatorial Atlantic Ocean – hypothesis of an Atlantic El Niño" Oceanol. Acta, 3, 209–220, 1980
  7. ^ Bjerknes, J. (1969). "Atmospheric teleconnections from the equatorial Pacific" (PDF). Mon. Weather Rev., 97, 163–172.