气候学
印度洋偶极子
印度洋
环境科学
地质学
海洋学
厄尔尼诺南方涛动
作者
Lei Fan,Hong Fu,Lei Yu
标识
DOI:10.1175/jcli-d-23-0534.1
摘要
Abstract This study identifies two distinct patterns of the summer Indian Ocean Dipole (IOD) — the coastal IOD and the offshore IOD — named based on the proximity of their eastern pole to Sumatra. Their spatial characteristics, evolutionary mechanisms, relationships with ENSO, impacts on precipitation, and the factors controlling the simulation performances of climate models are discussed. The coastal IOD shares the same eastern pole as the conventional IOD off Sumatra, but its western pole is located in the central southern tropical Indian Ocean (TIO). The offshore IOD shares the conventional western pole off Somalia, but its eastern pole is located in the central southern TIO. Regarding their evolutions, while they initially develop similarly, their later evolutions differ due to their distinct pole locations: the offshore IOD peaks in summer, while the coastal IOD can be sustained into autumn. The coastal IOD correlates to preceding and late ENSO states, but the offshore IOD does not, making it an independent internal mode of TIO. The two IODs affect climate differently, with only the coastal IOD affecting Australian rainfall. Climate models exhibit varied levels of performance in simulating the two IODs. Specifically, a stronger link between spring TIO rainfall and ENSO, as well as stronger southeasterly monsoonal winds in the southern TIO, can enhance the coastal IOD modeling, while a stronger summer Somali jet benefits the simulation of the offshore IOD. Distinguishing these two IODs has implications for accurate diagnosis and prediction of the summer climate surrounding the TIO.
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