The effect of climate change and systematic model bias on the monsoon-ENSO system: the TBO and...

20
The effect of climate change and systematic model bias on the monsoon-ENSO system: the TBO and changing ENSO regimes Andrew Turner ([email protected]) Pete Inness, Julia Slingo

Transcript of The effect of climate change and systematic model bias on the monsoon-ENSO system: the TBO and...

Page 1: The effect of climate change and systematic model bias on the monsoon-ENSO system: the TBO and changing ENSO regimes Andrew Turner (a.g.turner@rdg.ac.uk)

The effect of climate change and systematic model bias on the monsoon-ENSO system: the

TBO and changing ENSO regimes

Andrew Turner ([email protected])

Pete Inness, Julia Slingo

Page 2: The effect of climate change and systematic model bias on the monsoon-ENSO system: the TBO and changing ENSO regimes Andrew Turner (a.g.turner@rdg.ac.uk)

Outline

• Basis for study & heat flux adjustments.

• The effect of systematic bias in the future.

• Changing ENSO regimes and their properties.

• Why the eastward tendency?

• TBO in the model.

• Monsoon predictability and the observed record.

Page 3: The effect of climate change and systematic model bias on the monsoon-ENSO system: the TBO and changing ENSO regimes Andrew Turner (a.g.turner@rdg.ac.uk)

Background

• GCMs which generate mean climatologies close to observations are more likely to correctly represent interannual variability of precipitation. (Sperber & Palmer 1996).

• Equatorial Pacific SSTs important predictor of monsoon (Charney & Shukla 1981).

• Heat flux adjustments used at 1xCO2 to correct systematic biases (Turner et al. 2005).

• Systematic model errors likely to have large impact on future predictions.

• Same adjustments used at 2xCO2.

Page 4: The effect of climate change and systematic model bias on the monsoon-ENSO system: the TBO and changing ENSO regimes Andrew Turner (a.g.turner@rdg.ac.uk)

Annual mean heat flux into ocean

Peak-to-peak amplitude

Page 5: The effect of climate change and systematic model bias on the monsoon-ENSO system: the TBO and changing ENSO regimes Andrew Turner (a.g.turner@rdg.ac.uk)
Page 6: The effect of climate change and systematic model bias on the monsoon-ENSO system: the TBO and changing ENSO regimes Andrew Turner (a.g.turner@rdg.ac.uk)
Page 7: The effect of climate change and systematic model bias on the monsoon-ENSO system: the TBO and changing ENSO regimes Andrew Turner (a.g.turner@rdg.ac.uk)

Nino-3 region SSTA in the Flux adjusted model at 2xCO2

Page 8: The effect of climate change and systematic model bias on the monsoon-ENSO system: the TBO and changing ENSO regimes Andrew Turner (a.g.turner@rdg.ac.uk)

Nino-3 region SST annual cycle

Nino-3 variance cycle

Page 9: The effect of climate change and systematic model bias on the monsoon-ENSO system: the TBO and changing ENSO regimes Andrew Turner (a.g.turner@rdg.ac.uk)
Page 10: The effect of climate change and systematic model bias on the monsoon-ENSO system: the TBO and changing ENSO regimes Andrew Turner (a.g.turner@rdg.ac.uk)

Lag-correlation of TransNinoIndex with Nino3 SSTA, 12yr moving window

Page 11: The effect of climate change and systematic model bias on the monsoon-ENSO system: the TBO and changing ENSO regimes Andrew Turner (a.g.turner@rdg.ac.uk)
Page 12: The effect of climate change and systematic model bias on the monsoon-ENSO system: the TBO and changing ENSO regimes Andrew Turner (a.g.turner@rdg.ac.uk)

Possibilities for tendency to T-modes

• Weakening of trades allows deepening of thermocline in east Pacific (Federov & Philander 2001) dominance of vertical movements over zonal advection.

• Wang & An 2002 see similar pattern to 2xCO2 or FA response in 1976 climate shift, and with increased mean upwelling in east, decreased zonal temperature gradient.

Page 13: The effect of climate change and systematic model bias on the monsoon-ENSO system: the TBO and changing ENSO regimes Andrew Turner (a.g.turner@rdg.ac.uk)

Webster Yang South Asia DMI (JJAS)

Page 14: The effect of climate change and systematic model bias on the monsoon-ENSO system: the TBO and changing ENSO regimes Andrew Turner (a.g.turner@rdg.ac.uk)
Page 15: The effect of climate change and systematic model bias on the monsoon-ENSO system: the TBO and changing ENSO regimes Andrew Turner (a.g.turner@rdg.ac.uk)
Page 16: The effect of climate change and systematic model bias on the monsoon-ENSO system: the TBO and changing ENSO regimes Andrew Turner (a.g.turner@rdg.ac.uk)

Tendency to biennial period

• Subsurface Kelvin wave propagation more prevalent during biennial regime.

• Meridional confinement of wind stress response to ENSO (Kirtman 1997; Guilyardi et al. 2004) shortens period.

Page 17: The effect of climate change and systematic model bias on the monsoon-ENSO system: the TBO and changing ENSO regimes Andrew Turner (a.g.turner@rdg.ac.uk)

JJAS DMI vs AIR:

Irregular cc=0.31

Biennial cc=0.71

Page 18: The effect of climate change and systematic model bias on the monsoon-ENSO system: the TBO and changing ENSO regimes Andrew Turner (a.g.turner@rdg.ac.uk)
Page 19: The effect of climate change and systematic model bias on the monsoon-ENSO system: the TBO and changing ENSO regimes Andrew Turner (a.g.turner@rdg.ac.uk)

Summary

• Tendency to T-mode ENSO (together with associated Kelvin-wave behaviour at depth) when FA applied / CO2 doubled.

• Lack of broad meridional wind stress response in HadCM3 shortens period (only comes to light during strong T-mode behaviour).

Page 20: The effect of climate change and systematic model bias on the monsoon-ENSO system: the TBO and changing ENSO regimes Andrew Turner (a.g.turner@rdg.ac.uk)

Issues

• More understanding needs to be gained into the impact of different ENSO types on the monsoon system.

• Is modelled response to T-mode related to bienniality and/or incorrect representation in GCM?