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Geophysical Fluid Dynamics Laboratory Presented by Andrew Wittenberg Geophysical Fluid Dynamics Laboratory 17 October 2012 Tropical Climate Change and ENSO NOAA GOES-11 5 Oct 2011 1800 UTC

Presented by Andrew Wittenberg Geophysical Fluid Dynamics Laboratory 17 October 2012

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Tropical Climate Change and ENSO. Presented by Andrew Wittenberg Geophysical Fluid Dynamics Laboratory 17 October 2012. NOAA GOES-11 5 Oct 2011 1800 UTC. The Tropics: Firebox of the global circulation. Thompson Higher Education. 2. Projected surface temperature changes. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Presented by Andrew Wittenberg Geophysical Fluid Dynamics Laboratory 17 October 2012

Geophysical Fluid Dynamics Laboratory

Presented byAndrew Wittenberg

Geophysical Fluid Dynamics Laboratory17 October 2012

Tropical Climate Change and ENSO

NOAAGOES-11

5 Oct 20111800 UTC

Page 2: Presented by Andrew Wittenberg Geophysical Fluid Dynamics Laboratory 17 October 2012

Geophysical Fluid Dynamics Laboratory

The Tropics: Firebox of the global circulation

2

ThompsonHigher Education

Page 3: Presented by Andrew Wittenberg Geophysical Fluid Dynamics Laboratory 17 October 2012

Geophysical Fluid Dynamics Laboratory

Projected surface temperature changes

3

Strongest warmingover land &

equatorial Pacific

More warmingin calm areas,

and wherewinds weaken

Feedbacks fromlow clouds &

ocean advection

Vecchi et al. (2008)Vecchi & Wittenberg

(2010)Collins et al. (2010)

Xie et al. (2010)

Page 4: Presented by Andrew Wittenberg Geophysical Fluid Dynamics Laboratory 17 October 2012

Geophysical Fluid Dynamics Laboratory

Projected water vapor changes

4

Warming pumpswater vapor intothe atmosphere

Vecchi & Wittenberg (2010)

Collins et al. (2010)Xie et al. (2010)

Tropics today:~40 kg of water vapor

2050: +4 kg

Page 5: Presented by Andrew Wittenberg Geophysical Fluid Dynamics Laboratory 17 October 2012

Geophysical Fluid Dynamics Laboratory

Projected rainfall changes

5

Broadly:“the wet get wetter,the dry get drier”.

Over tropicaloceans:

“the warmerget wetter”.

Held & Soden (2006)Vecchi & Wittenberg (2010)

DiNezio et al. (2010)Xie et al. (2010)

Page 6: Presented by Andrew Wittenberg Geophysical Fluid Dynamics Laboratory 17 October 2012

Geophysical Fluid Dynamics Laboratory

Projected tropospheric temperature changes

6

Increasedstatic stabilityof atmosphere

Helps expandHadley Cell

Weakensconvective

mass fluxes &trade winds

Held & Soden (2006)Vecchi et al. (2006)

Frierson et al. (2007)Collins et al. (2010)

Page 7: Presented by Andrew Wittenberg Geophysical Fluid Dynamics Laboratory 17 October 2012

Geophysical Fluid Dynamics Laboratory

Projected upper-ocean temperature changes

7

Tropical oceanmore stratified

Stronger,shallower, and

flatter equatorialthermocline

DiNezio et al.(JC 2009, EOS 2010)Collins et al. (2010)

Page 8: Presented by Andrew Wittenberg Geophysical Fluid Dynamics Laboratory 17 October 2012

Geophysical Fluid Dynamics Laboratory

Earth's dominant interannual climate fluctuation

8

NOAA/CPC

El Niño

Normal

Page 9: Presented by Andrew Wittenberg Geophysical Fluid Dynamics Laboratory 17 October 2012

Geophysical Fluid Dynamics Laboratory

Projected ENSO changes (CMIP3/AR4)

9

correl(SST trend of 1%/yr, SST.PC1 of PICTRL)10S-10N, 120E-80W

Yamaguchi & Noda (JMSJ 2006)

std(S

LP.P

C1

of

SR

ES.A

2 (

20

51

-21

00

))/

std(S

LP.P

C1

of

20

C3

M)

30

S-3

0N

, 3

0E-6

0W

van O

ldenborg

h e

t al. (

OS 2

00

5)

CM2.1

Weak/ambiguousnear-term

anthropogenicimpacts on ENSO

Intrinsicmodulation

Reviews:

Meehl et al.(IPCC-AR4 2007)

Guilyardi et al.(BAMS 2009)

Vecchi & Wittenberg (WIREs CC 2010)

Collins et al.(Nature Geosci. 2010)

Page 10: Presented by Andrew Wittenberg Geophysical Fluid Dynamics Laboratory 17 October 2012

Geophysical Fluid Dynamics Laboratory

Intrinsic modulation of ENSO: Observed

10

Vecchi & Wittenberg(WIREs CC 2010)

Historical SSTA (ERSST.v3)

Palmyra corals(Cobb et al.,

Nature 2003)

Multiproxy reconstructions:Emile-Geay et al.(2011abc, subm.)

Page 11: Presented by Andrew Wittenberg Geophysical Fluid Dynamics Laboratory 17 October 2012

Geophysical Fluid Dynamics Laboratory

Intrinsic modulation of ENSO: Simulated

11

Wittenberg (GRL 2009)

Page 12: Presented by Andrew Wittenberg Geophysical Fluid Dynamics Laboratory 17 October 2012

Geophysical Fluid Dynamics Laboratory

The most extreme ENSO epochs

12

Wittenberg et al.(in prep.)

Page 13: Presented by Andrew Wittenberg Geophysical Fluid Dynamics Laboratory 17 October 2012

Geophysical Fluid Dynamics Laboratory

Initial conditions for “perfect” reforecasts

13

Wittenberg et al.(in prep.)

Page 14: Presented by Andrew Wittenberg Geophysical Fluid Dynamics Laboratory 17 October 2012

Geophysical Fluid Dynamics Laboratory

40 “perfect” reforecasts – best possible skill

14

Wittenberg et al.(in prep.)

Page 15: Presented by Andrew Wittenberg Geophysical Fluid Dynamics Laboratory 17 October 2012

Geophysical Fluid Dynamics Laboratory

1860: Spread of 100yr NINO3 SST spectra

15

286 ppmv

Wittenberg (2009)

Page 16: Presented by Andrew Wittenberg Geophysical Fluid Dynamics Laboratory 17 October 2012

Geophysical Fluid Dynamics Laboratory

1990: Stronger annual cycle & ENSO

16

353 ppmv

Wittenberg (2009)

Page 17: Presented by Andrew Wittenberg Geophysical Fluid Dynamics Laboratory 17 October 2012

Geophysical Fluid Dynamics Laboratory

2xCO2: A perfect climate for ENSO?

17

572 ppmv

Wittenberg (2009)

Page 18: Presented by Andrew Wittenberg Geophysical Fluid Dynamics Laboratory 17 October 2012

Geophysical Fluid Dynamics Laboratory

4xCO2: Stronger annual cycle, weaker ENSO

18

1144 ppmv

Wittenberg (2009)

Page 19: Presented by Andrew Wittenberg Geophysical Fluid Dynamics Laboratory 17 October 2012

Geophysical Fluid Dynamics Laboratory

Competing changes in ENSO feedbacks

19

1. Amplifiers - stronger rainfall & wind stress responses to SSTAs - stronger thermocline, shallower mixed layer - weaker replenishment of surface waters from below

2. Dampers - stronger evaporative & cloud-shading responses - weaker upwelling -> surface less connected to thermocline - smaller dynamic warm pool -> less room for warming

3. Ambiguous effects - stronger intraseasonal wind variability

Guilyardi et al. (BAMS 2009); Vecchi & Wittenberg (WIREs CC 2010)Collins et al. (Nature Geosci. 2010); DiNezio et al. (JC 2009; EOS 2010; JC 2011 subm.)

Ongoing activities with CLIVAR Working Groups,D. Battisti, A. Atwood, M. Cane, C. Karamperidou, F.-F. Jin, J. Brown, F. Graham

Page 20: Presented by Andrew Wittenberg Geophysical Fluid Dynamics Laboratory 17 October 2012

Geophysical Fluid Dynamics Laboratory

Summary

20

1. Projections of tropical climate change - tropics moisten, stratify, expand - circulation weakens; ocean thermocline shoals & flattens - SST: calm(er) get warmer; ocean advection changes - rainfall: wet get wetter; warmer get wetter - distinct from El Niño

2. Is ENSO changing? - diverse projections - competing feedbacks + optima + model biases -> uncertainty

3. Risk of intrinsic ENSO modulation - ENSO capable of wide swings in behavior on its own - interannual predictability only, except after a big event