The energetics of El Nino and La Nina

Publication Type  Journal Article
Year of Publication  2000
Authors  Goddard, L.; Philander, S. G.
Journal Title  Journal of Climate
Volume  13
Issue  9
Pages  1496-1516
Journal Date  May 1
ISBN Number  0894-8755
Accession Number  ISI:000086905200005
Key Words  sea-surface temperature; available potential-energy; atmosphere ocean model; southern oscillation; equatorial currents; pacific-ocean; enso; variability; circulation; simulation
Abstract  

Data from a realistic model of the ocean, forced with observed atmospheric conditions for the period 1953-92, are analyzed to determine the energetics of interannual variability in the tropical Pacific. The work done by the winds on the ocean, rather than generating kinetic energy, does work against pressure gradients and generates buoyancy power, which in turn is responsible for the rate of change of available potential energy (APE). This means interannual fluctuations in work done by the wind have a phase that leads variations in APE. Variations in the sea surface temperature (SST) of the eastern equatorial Pacific and in APE are highly correlated and in phase so that changes in the work done by the wind are precursors of El Nino. The wind does positive work on the ocean during the half cycle that starts with the peak of El Nino and continues into La Nina; it does negative work during the remaining half cycle.The results corroborate the delayed oscillator mechanism that qualitatively describes the deterministic behavior of ENSO. In that paradigm, a thermocline perturbation appearing in the western equatorial Pacific affects the transition from one phase of ENSO to the next when that perturbation arrives in the eastern equatorial Pacific where it influences SST. The analysis of energetics indicates that the transition starts earlier, during La Nina, when the perturbation is still in the far western equatorial Pacific. Although the perturbation at that stage affects the thermal structure mainly in the thermocline, at depth, the associated currents are manifest at the surface and immediately affect work done by the wind. For the simulation presented here, the change in energy resulting from adjustment processes far outweighs that due to stochastic processes, such as intraseasonal wind bursts, at least during periods of successive El Nino and La Nina events.

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311UYTimes Cited:6Cited References Count:45

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