Litcius/Paper detail

Atmospheric modes fiddling the simulated ENSO impact on tropical cyclone genesis over the Northwest Pacific

Jiuwei Zhao, Ruifen Zhan, Hiroyuki Murakami, Yuqing Wang, Shang‐Ping Xie, Leying Zhang, Yipeng Guo

2023npj Climate and Atmospheric Science15 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Abstract The El Niño-Southern Oscillation (ENSO) is crucial to the interannual variability of tropical cyclone (TC) genesis over the western North Pacific (WNP). However, most state-of-the-art climate models exhibit a consistent pattern of uncertainty in the simulated TC genesis frequency (TCGF) over the WNP in ENSO phases. Here, we analyze large ensemble simulations of TC-resolved climate models to identify the source of this uncertainty. Results show that large uncertainty appears in the South China Sea and east of the Philippines, primarily arising from two distinct atmospheric modes: the Matsuno-Gill-mode (MG-mode) and the Pacific-Japan-like pattern (PJ-mode). These two modes are closely associated with anomalous diabatic heating linked to tropical precipitation bias in model simulations. By conditionally constraining either of the modes, we can significantly reduce model uncertainty in simulating the dipole structure of the TCGF anomalies, confirming that it is the atmospheric circulation bias in response to tropical precipitation bias that causes uncertainty in the simulated WNP TCGF.

Topics & Concepts

ClimatologyTropical cycloneEl Niño Southern OscillationPrecipitationMode (computer interface)Environmental scienceGeneral Circulation ModelAtmospheric circulationAtmospheric sciencesDiabaticClimate modelTropical cyclogenesisClimate changeGeologyCyclone (programming language)OceanographyMeteorologyGeographyPhysicsAdiabatic processComputer hardwareComputer scienceThermodynamicsField-programmable gate arrayOperating systemTropical and Extratropical Cyclones ResearchClimate variability and modelsOcean Waves and Remote Sensing