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Large-scale decadal changes of sea level in the Indo-Pacific region. Tony Lee, Ichiro Fukumori, Cecile Cabanes, and Lee-Lueng Fu NASA Jet Propulsion Laboratory, California Institute of Technology. Relative phasing Forcing Vertical structure Implications to meridional circulation
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Large-scale decadal changes of sea level in the Indo-Pacific region Tony Lee, Ichiro Fukumori, Cecile Cabanes, and Lee-Lueng Fu NASA Jet Propulsion Laboratory, California Institute of Technology • Relative phasing • Forcing • Vertical structure • Implications to meridional circulation • Implications to horizontal circulation Analyze altimeter & scatterometer data, model sensitivity, assimilation.
Qiu (2002): intensified North Pacific Current & changing shape of Western Subarctic Gyre in the 90s. • Lee & Fukumori (2003): variation of tropical-subtropical exchange; compensation of boundary & interior pycnocline transports. • Lee (2004): 90’s weakening of shallow overturning cell in the South Indian Ocean. • McPhaden & Zhang (2004): Rebound of tropical-subtropical interior pycnocline transport from multi-decadal weakening. • Fu (2005): Subsiding SSH trend in recent years. • Roemmich et al. (2006): Spin-up of the S. Pacific subtropical gyre. SAM forcing. • Qiu & Chen (2006): Decadal variability of SSH in the South Pacific. T/P + JASON-1 T/P + JASON-1 1 2 5 4 3 6 7 Linear trend of SSH estimated from T/P & JASON-1 data
3-year smoothed SSH trend 1993-2000 SSH time series show change of trend around 1999-2001.
Model-data comparison of SSH time series Model simulation has some skill. Assimilation closer to observations. Longer period perspective: SSH data capture part of decadal fluctuations
Sensitivity experiments suggest dominant role of wind Some effect of buoyancy forcing
Forced by near-local wind in the east. Locally forced Tilted lines reflect Rossby wave effect Forced by Pacific wind Stronger trade wind contribute to rising SSH in the west; enhanced by “local” curl. Weaker trade wind Trends of observed SSH & wind stress curl for 1993-2000 T/P & JASON-1 ERS-1 & -2
SSH near New Zealand: • Rossby-wave propagation vs. local Ekman pumping. • GCM vs. 1st-mode Rossby-wave model. • Local Ekman pumping cannot account for change; Rossby-wave propagation important; forcing not too far east. • 1st-mode Rossby-wave model under-estimates change.
Vertical structure: time-depth distribution of dynamic height (cm) Primarily baroclinic Baroclinic + barotropic Some barotropic contribution Problem for 1st-mode R. wave model
Implications to meridional circulation: Strengthening shallow overturning cells in the Pacific 1993-2000. Weakening shallow overturning cell in the South Indian Ocean. Both reverse in recent years. More Ekman divergence Less southward warm Ekman flow Trend of zonal wind stress 1993-2000 (ERS) Stronger trade wind Weaker trade wind Trend of SSH 1993-2000 (T/P & JASON-1) More thermocline divergence Less northward flow of cold water
Decadal variation of Indo-Pacific trade winds (“biases” adjusted among products) Averaged zonal wind at 10S in the Indian Ocean “Phase change” around 1999-2000 Averaged zonal wind in the equatorial Pacific 2.5S-2.5N
Have discussed forcing, vertical structure, & meridional circulation. Next: change of horizontal circulation, but first…
Comparison of SSH trend (1993-2000): data, simulation, & assimilation Much improvement by assimilation; used for analysis of gyre changes.
Barotropic stream function anomalies from ECCO KF assimilation + red is clockwise. 96-98 93-95 99-01 02-03
Difference of barotropic stream function: (1999-2001) – (1993-1995) Weakening Western Subarctic Gyre Strengthening North Central Pacific Gyre Strengthening Kuroshio recirculation gyre Strengthening South Pacific Subtropical Gyre Anomalous cyclonic gyre
Summary • SSH data show decadal fluctuations in many parts of the Indo-Pacific Ocean with a tendency change around 1999-2001; PDO & AO forcing. • Changes at mid- to high-latitude Pacific & western tropical Pacific primarily caused by “near-local” (to-the-east) wind stress curl; Rossby-wave propagation important. • Much decadal changes in the Indian Ocean are forced by Indian-Ocean wind; but that near western Australia is forced by Pacific wind. • Tropical SSH changes: primarily 1st baroclinic mode. • Mid- to high-latitude changes: both baroclinic & barotropic. • 1st-mode Rossby-wave model under-estimates SSH change near New Zealand (missing contribution by other modes, e.g., barotropic). • Implications to circulation: speedup & slowdown of shallow overturning cells in the tropics & horizontal gyres at mid- to high-latitude Pacific.