Transcript Document

NATS 101-06
Lecture 16
Atmo-Ocean Interactions
El Niño-Southern Oscillation
Summary
• Global Circulation
Differential Heating Between Tropics and Poles
Three Cells: Hadley-Ferrel-Polar
Mid-Latitude Westerlies
Patterns shift slightly with seasons
• Precipitation
Major Deserts occur under Sub-Tropical High
Mid-latitude storms occur along Polar Front
Triple Cell (~Real World)
• Equator-to-Pole temperature difference and
rotation of Earth produce 3 circulation cells
Hadley Cell (Thermally Direct)
Ferrel Cell (Indirect: Forced by Hadley & Polar)
Polar Cell (Thermally Direct)
Hadley
Ferrel
Polar
Pole
Equator
Shift with Seasons
Global Circulation - Precipitation
Ahrens Fig 13-2
Prevailing Winds
Ocean Currents
Drag from wind exerts a force on the ocean
surface in the same direction as the wind.
Currents of upper ocean are due to wind.
Tend to flow in the direction of prevailing wind.
Poleward currents are warm; equatorward
currents are cold.
Thus, oceans transport heat from the tropics to
the poles, about the same amount of heat as the
wind.
Ocean Currents of World
Ahrens Fig. 7.24
Summer SST Along West Coast
Prevailing
Winds
Coastal
Surface Water
Ahrens Fig 7.24
Sea surface temperatures
(SST) along West Coast
are quite cold during
summer, especially off
Northern California.
Due to upwelling of cold,
nutrient rich water by
prevailing N winds.
Ekman Spiral
Ahrens, Older Ed.
Surface water moves 45 to the right of prevailing wind.
Subsurface water moves at angles greater than 45.
Net transport of surface layer is 90 to the right.
Coriolis force is responsible for the rightward rotation.
Upwelling from Alongshore Winds
Ahrens Fig 7.25
Wind pushes surface water southward. Coriolis force
deflects water to the right. Cold water from below
rises to surface. Fog persists over the cold water.
El Nino 3.4
Upwelling Regions
weather.unisys.com
El Nino-Southern Oscillation
(ENSO)
An important atmospheric-ocean feedback
Normal conditions in tropical Pacific:
-Warm SST, low SLP, and T-storms in W Pacific
-Strong subtropical highs in E Pacific
-Easterly winds and cool upwelling water along
equator in East Pacific
-Prevailing southerly winds off of Peru produce
cold upwelling and excellent fishing
El Niño-Southern Oscillation
(ENSO)
Every few years (4-5 years):
-Equatorial Central Pacific warms
-Low SLP, T-storms shift to Central and East
Pacific (the Southern Oscillation)
-Trades and southerly winds off Peru weaken
-Upwelling ceases off Peru, warming leads to
massive kill off of fish. Typically occurs around
Christmas (an El Niño event)
Alters global patterns of wind, temp and rain
Walker Circulation
Pushes water westward
Darwin
Tahiti
Aguado & Burt, p230
Walker Circulation oscillates with
a quasi-period of every few years.
Oscillation is very evident in SLP
records for Darwin and Tahiti.
Southern Oscillation Index (SOI)
SST
SLP
El Nino Precipitation Extremes
La Nina Precipitation Extremes
El Nino Precipitation Extremes
La Nina Precipitation Extremes
ENSO-Atmosphere Feedback
Ocean temperature pattern
Ocean currents, upwelling
SLP, winds, storms, etc.
By observing SST’s and surface winds in equatorial Pacific,
we are able to forecast ENSO events with considerable skill.
ENSO forecasts lead to skillful seasonal forecasts for the US
several months in advance (e.g. 1997-1998 winter).
Summary
• Major Ocean Currents
Driven by prevailing wind
• Upwelling Regions
Occurs along west coasts of continents
Cold water rises from below to surface
Nutrient rich, excellent fishing regions
Summary
• El Nino-Southern Oscillation
Occurs every few years
Central equatorial Pacific warms
Low SLP, T-storms move with warm water
Upwelling weakens along Peru coast
Can be predicted up to one-year in advance
Modulates global patterns of wind, temp, rain
Assignments
• Following Lecture
Topic - Air Masses
Reading - Ahrens pg 201-212
Problems - 8.1, 8.11