IUGG 2003 Abstract
JSP09
Physical Aspects of Air-Sea Interaction (IAPSO, IAMAS)
Thursday, July 10 PM
Location: Site B, Room 20
Presiding Chair:S. Gulev
TIME [ 1530 ] [ JSP09/10P/B20-006 ]
INFLUENCE OF TRANSIENT ATMOSPHERIC CIRCULATION ON THE SURFACE HEATING AND TEMPERATURE OF THE PACIFIC WARM POOL
Ming-Dah CHOU(NASA Goddard Space Flight Center)
Shu-Hsien CHOU(NASA Goddard Space Flight Center)
Pui-King CHAN ( Science Systems & Applications, Inc. )
Analyses of data on clouds, winds, and surface heat fluxes show that the transient behavior of basin-wide large-scale circulation has a significant influence on the warm pool sea surface temperature (SST). Trade winds converge to regions of the highest SST in the equatorial western Pacific. These regions have the largest cloud cover and smallest wind speed. Both surface solar heating and evaporative cooling are weak. The reduced evaporative cooling due to weakened winds exceeds the reduced solar heating due to enhanced cloudiness. The result is a maximum surface heating in the strong convective and high SST regions. Data also show that the maximum surface heating in strong convective regions is interrupted by transient atmospheric and oceanic circulation. Due to the seasonal variation of the insolation at the top of the atmosphere, trade winds and clouds also experience seasonal variations. Regions of high SST and low-level convergence follow the Sun, where the surface heating is a maximum. As the Sun moves away from a convective region, the strong trade winds set in, and the evaporative cooling enhances, resulting in a net cooling of the surface. During an El Nino, the maximum SST and convective region shifts eastward from the maritime continent to the equatorial central Pacific. Following the eastward shift of the maximum SST, the region of maximum cloudiness and surface heating also shift eastward. As the atmospheric and oceanic circulation returns to normal situations, the trade winds increase and the surface heating decreases. We conclude that the evaporative cooling associated with the seasonal and interannual variations of trade winds is one of the major factors that modulate the SST distribution of the Pacific warm pool.