4.6 Article

A hybrid coupled model for the pacific ocean-atmosphere system. Part I: Description and basic performance

Journal

ADVANCES IN ATMOSPHERIC SCIENCES
Volume 32, Issue 3, Pages 301-318

Publisher

SCIENCE PRESS
DOI: 10.1007/s00376-014-3266-5

Keywords

hybrid coupled model; ocean-atmosphere coupling; ENSO; forcing; feedback; satellite data

Funding

  1. CAS Strategic Priority Project (the Western Pacific Ocean System: Structure, Dynamics and Consequences, WPOS)
  2. China 973 project [2012CB956000]
  3. Institute of Oceanology, Chinese Academy of Sciences (IOCAS)
  4. National Natural Science Foundation of China [41206017]

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A hybrid coupled model (HCM) is constructed for El Nio-Southern Oscillation (ENSO)-related modeling studies over almost the entire Pacific basin. An ocean general circulation model is coupled to a statistical atmospheric model for interannual wind stress anomalies to represent their dominant coupling with sea surface temperatures. In addition, various relevant forcing and feedback processes exist in the region and can affect ENSO in a significant way; their effects are simply represented using historical data and are incorporated into the HCM, including stochastic forcing of atmospheric winds, and feedbacks associated with freshwater flux, ocean biology-induced heating (OBH), and tropical instability waves (TIWs). In addition to its computational efficiency, the advantages of making use of such an HCM enable these related forcing and feedback processes to be represented individually or collectively, allowing their modulating effects on ENSO to be examined in a clean and clear way. In this paper, examples are given to illustrate the ability of the HCM to depict the mean ocean state, the circulation pathways connecting the subtropics and tropics in the western Pacific, and interannual variability associated with ENSO. As satellite data are taken to parameterize processes that are not explicitly represented in the HCM, this work also demonstrates an innovative method of using remotely sensed data for climate modeling. Further model applications related with ENSO modulations by extratropical influences and by various forcings and feedbacks will be presented in Part II of this study.

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