Critical Role of Northern Off-Equatorial Sea Surface Temperature Forcing Associated with Central Pacific El Nino in More Frequent Tropical Cyclone Movements toward East Asia
- Authors
- Jin, Chun-Sil; Ho, Chang-Hoi; Kim, Joo-Hong; Lee, Dong-Kyou; Cha, Dong-Hyun; Yeh, Sang-Wook
- Issue Date
- Apr-2013
- Publisher
- American Meteorological Society
- Keywords
- IMPACT; EVENTS; REGIONAL CLIMATE MODEL; ENSO; OCEAN
- Citation
- Journal of Climate, v.26, no.8, pp 2534 - 2545
- Pages
- 12
- Indexed
- SCI
SCIE
SCOPUS
- Journal Title
- Journal of Climate
- Volume
- 26
- Number
- 8
- Start Page
- 2534
- End Page
- 2545
- URI
- https://scholarworks.bwise.kr/erica/handle/2021.sw.erica/28463
- DOI
- 10.1175/JCLI-D-12-00287.1
- ISSN
- 0894-8755
1520-0442
- Abstract
- Observational records reveal that the number of tropical cyclones (TCs) approaching East Asia in July-October is positively correlated with sea surface temperatures (SSTs) in the equatorial and northern off-equatorial central Pacific (CP) oceans, indicating the significant impact of CP El Nino (CP-EN). Through experiments using a Weather Research and Forecast (WRF) model-based regional climate model, this study demonstrates that it is northern off-equatorial CP warming, rather than equatorial CP warming, that effectively induces local anomalous steering flows pertinent to the observed increase in TC activity over East Asia during CP-EN. Sensitivity experiments, in which the prescribed CP-EN-related SST anomaly is confined near the equator, do not capture the observed TC increase over East Asia, whereas those including the off-equatorial region successfully reproduce observed atmospheric and TC variabilities. The off-equatorial CP SST anomaly acts to expand the anomalous cyclonic response in the Philippine Sea farther northward. This produces a tunnel effect in the East China Sea, by which more TCs move to East Asian coastal regions (e.g., east China, Taiwan, Korea, and Japan).
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