1145 / 2024-09-20 14:38:14
Unveiling the Indian Ocean Forcing on Winter Eastern Warming – Western Cooling Pattern over North America
Indian Ocean, North America, teleconnection
Session 20 - Decadal Climate Variability: Key Processes of Air-Sea Interaction, Mechanisms and Predictability
Abstract Accepted
Yurong Hou / Chinese Academy of Sciences;Institute of Atmospheric Physics
Xichen Li / Institute of Atmospheric Physics, Chinese Academy of Sciences
While the tropical Pacific teleconnection to North America has been studied extensively, the impact of the Indian Ocean on North American climate has received less attention. Based on observational analysis and numerical model simulation, we find that the Indian Ocean plays a crucial role in North American winter climate through a teleconnection termed the Indian Ocean - North America pattern. We show that in the warm Indian Ocean phase, this teleconnection contributes to anomalously cold winters along the west coast of the United States through advection with increased mountain snowfall, while simultaneously leading to warmer conditions over the Great Lakes region. Snow-albedo feedback amplifies these Rossby wave-induced surface anomalies. Remarkably, this teleconnection pattern is at work on both interannual and multi-decadal timescales, with its climatic impact being slightly less pronounced than that induced by tropical Pacific sea surface temperature anomalies. Our findings underscore the significance of the Indian Ocean in both the prediction and future projection of North American climate.