Dynamics of 2015 positive Indian Ocean Dipole

Evolution of typical positive Indian Ocean Dipole (pIOD) event was dominated by a significant sea-surface temperature (SST) cooling in the south-eastern tropical Indian Ocean. Interestingly, during the evolution of 2015 pIOD event, the SST in the south-eastern tropical Indian Ocean did not reveal si...

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Main Authors: Iskhaq Iskandar, Dedi Setiabudidaya, Mokhamad Yusup Nur Khakim, Putri Adia Utari
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: CSIRO Publishing 2019-01-01
Series:Journal of Southern Hemisphere Earth Systems Science
Online Access:https://www.publish.csiro.au/es/pdf/ES19002
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spelling doaj-028c3486fbbc4c769e7bcaa4e1bb63b42021-05-26T04:31:58ZengCSIRO PublishingJournal of Southern Hemisphere Earth Systems Science2206-58652019-01-016917583ES19002Dynamics of 2015 positive Indian Ocean Dipole Iskhaq Iskandar Dedi Setiabudidaya Mokhamad Yusup Nur KhakimPutri Adia UtariEvolution of typical positive Indian Ocean Dipole (pIOD) event was dominated by a significant sea-surface temperature (SST) cooling in the south-eastern tropical Indian Ocean. Interestingly, during the evolution of 2015 pIOD event, the SST in the south-eastern tropical Indian Ocean did not reveal significant cooling, instead anomalous strong SST warming took place in the western tropical Indian Ocean off the East African coast. This anomalous SST warming was associated with a weakening of the Asian summer monsoon. Furthermore, analysis on the mixed layer heat budget demonstrated that the evolution of the 2015 pIOD event could be attributed mainly to the air-sea heat flux. By decomposing the air-sea heat flux, it is found that reduced latent heat loss plays an important role on the SST warming in the western pole and keeping SST warm in the eastern pole. We note that a residual term also may play a role during the initial development of the event. In contrast to the SST pattern, the subsurface temperature revealed a clear positive dipole pattern. Shallow (deep) 20°C isothermal layer in the eastern (western) equatorial Indian Ocean was observed during boreal summer. This robust subsurface dipole pattern indicated that the subsurface ocean response was largely wind driven through the equatorial wave dynamics as previously suggested.https://www.publish.csiro.au/es/pdf/ES19002
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Iskhaq Iskandar
Dedi Setiabudidaya
Mokhamad Yusup Nur Khakim
Putri Adia Utari
spellingShingle Iskhaq Iskandar
Dedi Setiabudidaya
Mokhamad Yusup Nur Khakim
Putri Adia Utari
Dynamics of 2015 positive Indian Ocean Dipole
Journal of Southern Hemisphere Earth Systems Science
author_facet Iskhaq Iskandar
Dedi Setiabudidaya
Mokhamad Yusup Nur Khakim
Putri Adia Utari
author_sort Iskhaq Iskandar
title Dynamics of 2015 positive Indian Ocean Dipole
title_short Dynamics of 2015 positive Indian Ocean Dipole
title_full Dynamics of 2015 positive Indian Ocean Dipole
title_fullStr Dynamics of 2015 positive Indian Ocean Dipole
title_full_unstemmed Dynamics of 2015 positive Indian Ocean Dipole
title_sort dynamics of 2015 positive indian ocean dipole
publisher CSIRO Publishing
series Journal of Southern Hemisphere Earth Systems Science
issn 2206-5865
publishDate 2019-01-01
description Evolution of typical positive Indian Ocean Dipole (pIOD) event was dominated by a significant sea-surface temperature (SST) cooling in the south-eastern tropical Indian Ocean. Interestingly, during the evolution of 2015 pIOD event, the SST in the south-eastern tropical Indian Ocean did not reveal significant cooling, instead anomalous strong SST warming took place in the western tropical Indian Ocean off the East African coast. This anomalous SST warming was associated with a weakening of the Asian summer monsoon. Furthermore, analysis on the mixed layer heat budget demonstrated that the evolution of the 2015 pIOD event could be attributed mainly to the air-sea heat flux. By decomposing the air-sea heat flux, it is found that reduced latent heat loss plays an important role on the SST warming in the western pole and keeping SST warm in the eastern pole. We note that a residual term also may play a role during the initial development of the event. In contrast to the SST pattern, the subsurface temperature revealed a clear positive dipole pattern. Shallow (deep) 20°C isothermal layer in the eastern (western) equatorial Indian Ocean was observed during boreal summer. This robust subsurface dipole pattern indicated that the subsurface ocean response was largely wind driven through the equatorial wave dynamics as previously suggested.
url https://www.publish.csiro.au/es/pdf/ES19002
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