A platform for research: civil engineering, architecture and urbanism
The North Pacific Blob acts to increase the predictability of the Atlantic warm pool
The Atlantic warm pool (AWP) has profound impacts on extreme weather events and climate variability. Factors influencing the AWP and its predictability are still not fully understood. Other than local ocean–atmosphere feedbacks and El Niño Southern Oscillation, we find an extratropical precursor from the Northeast Pacific (known as the Blob), which leads the AWP by 1 year with a robust correlation ( r = 0.68). A suite of Northeast Pacific pacemaker experiments successfully reproduces the leading influence of the Blob on the AWP. The preceding summer Blob-related sea surface temperature (SST) warming signal can be transmitted towards the lower latitudes through the seasonal footprint mechanism, leading to the central Pacific warming in the winter and following spring. Such a strong tropical Pacific SST heating excites an anomalous atmospheric wave train that resembles the Pacific/North American (PNA) teleconnection pattern. At the downstream portion of the PNA, the low sea surface pressure anomalies can be found over the AWP region during the following spring. The anomalous low initiates the AWP SST warming, and the AWP warmer SST can persist into summer and is further amplified due to ocean–atmosphere feedbacks. Our results show that the North Pacific Blob may act as a useful predictor of the AWP 1 year in advance through trans-basin interactions. A Blob-based prediction model shows considerable hindcast skill for the observed AWP SST anomaly.
The North Pacific Blob acts to increase the predictability of the Atlantic warm pool
The Atlantic warm pool (AWP) has profound impacts on extreme weather events and climate variability. Factors influencing the AWP and its predictability are still not fully understood. Other than local ocean–atmosphere feedbacks and El Niño Southern Oscillation, we find an extratropical precursor from the Northeast Pacific (known as the Blob), which leads the AWP by 1 year with a robust correlation ( r = 0.68). A suite of Northeast Pacific pacemaker experiments successfully reproduces the leading influence of the Blob on the AWP. The preceding summer Blob-related sea surface temperature (SST) warming signal can be transmitted towards the lower latitudes through the seasonal footprint mechanism, leading to the central Pacific warming in the winter and following spring. Such a strong tropical Pacific SST heating excites an anomalous atmospheric wave train that resembles the Pacific/North American (PNA) teleconnection pattern. At the downstream portion of the PNA, the low sea surface pressure anomalies can be found over the AWP region during the following spring. The anomalous low initiates the AWP SST warming, and the AWP warmer SST can persist into summer and is further amplified due to ocean–atmosphere feedbacks. Our results show that the North Pacific Blob may act as a useful predictor of the AWP 1 year in advance through trans-basin interactions. A Blob-based prediction model shows considerable hindcast skill for the observed AWP SST anomaly.
The North Pacific Blob acts to increase the predictability of the Atlantic warm pool
Yusen Liu (author) / Cheng Sun (author) / Fred Kucharski (author) / Jianping Li (author) / Chunzai Wang (author) / Ruiqiang Ding (author)
2021
Article (Journal)
Electronic Resource
Unknown
Metadata by DOAJ is licensed under CC BY-SA 1.0
British Library Online Contents | 2006
|The warm Blob in the northeast Pacific—the bridge leading to the 2015/16 El Niño
DOAJ | 2017
|Spatio-Temporal Characteristics of the Indo-Pacific Warm Pool and the Corresponding Rain Pool
DOAJ | 2022
|Observing the coupling effect between warm pool and "rain pool" in the Pacific Ocean
Online Contents | 2004
|