马登-朱利安振荡
降水
气候学
环境科学
地理
大气科学
气象学
地质学
对流
作者
Felipe Abbott Matus,Roberto Rondanelli,José A. Rutllant,Stephanie A. Henderson
摘要
Abstract During austral winter under neutral ENSO conditions, positive precipitation anomalies in Southwestern South America from 30 to 45S coincide with strong real‐time multivariate MJO (RMM) Phase 1 events. Using ERA5 composites arranged according to active RMM phases, we found that a three‐part mechanism, traced approximately 10–15 days before MJO Phase 1 events, roughly corresponding to RMM phases 7 and 8, explains these precipitation anomalies. This mechanism is composed of three Rossby wave trains in response to convective perturbations: two cross equatorial teleconnections attributed to suppressed convection in the Indian Ocean and the Maritime Continent, and an interhemispheric Rossby wave linked to enhanced convection over the warm pool of the western hemisphere. Composite analyses of OLR and wave activity flux, complemented with Rossby wave ray tracing, support these findings. This research provides insights into the MJO's influence on additional large‐scale teleconnection patterns across the Southern Hemisphere besides the Pacific South American (PSA) teleconnection mode. The dispersion of the convective RMM phase at different lags and the interaction between multiple wave trains introduce uncertainty when associating a specific RMM phase with precipitation anomalies.
科研通智能强力驱动
Strongly Powered by AbleSci AI