2002
DOI: 10.1029/2000jd000298
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Evolution of El Niño–Southern Oscillation and global atmospheric surface temperatures

Abstract: The origins of the delayed increases in global surface temperature accompanying El Niño events and the implications for the role of diabatic processes in El Niño–Southern Oscillation (ENSO) are explored. The evolution of global mean surface temperatures, zonal means and fields of sea surface temperatures, land surface temperatures, precipitation, outgoing longwave radiation, vertically integrated diabatic heating and divergence of atmospheric energy transports, and ocean heat content in the Pacific is document… Show more

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Cited by 418 publications
(356 citation statements)
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“…Thus, initially the role of El Nino is to support the positive tendency. Note that the contribution of ENSO to the long-term temperature trend in the last 50 years is about 0.06°C or 10% of the overall trend [Trenberth et al, 2002]. However, as Figure 2a indicates, after a time scale of the order of 16 (5 + 11) months, El Nino's role is to reverse that tendency.…”
Section: Data Analysis and Resultsmentioning
confidence: 93%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…Thus, initially the role of El Nino is to support the positive tendency. Note that the contribution of ENSO to the long-term temperature trend in the last 50 years is about 0.06°C or 10% of the overall trend [Trenberth et al, 2002]. However, as Figure 2a indicates, after a time scale of the order of 16 (5 + 11) months, El Nino's role is to reverse that tendency.…”
Section: Data Analysis and Resultsmentioning
confidence: 93%
“…Thus, Figure 1 displays the well-known result that El Nino tends to increase the average temperature of the planet and that in general a La Nina succeeds an El Nino. Mechanisms for this warmth can be traced to changes in cloudiness and atmospheric circulations [Trenberth et al, 2002;Klein et al, 1999;Kumar and Hoerling, 2003]. Next, we present results that add another piece to the puzzle of the relationship between ENSO and global temperature.…”
Section: Data Analysis and Resultsmentioning
confidence: 93%
“…Changes in the frequency of El Niño events are known to have occurred during the 20th century, most notably and recently during the 'climate shift' around 1976 related to a phase change of the Pacific Decadal Oscillation (PDO) (Trenberth et al, 2002). Indeed, Church et al (2004) argued that this shift is responsible for the minimum rates of sea-level rise in the western Pacific and eastern Indian oceans in the latter half of the 20th century and the regional decelerations over this period.…”
Section: Discussion Of the Characteristics Of Accelerationsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…A property of the CW06 method is that it can produce near-global maps of sea-level trends and accelerations, even for regions with no tide gauge data, by relying on the spatial interpolations between the available data provided by the EOFs. Trenberth et al, 2002 and see below) and a minimum in the rate of sea-level rise in the western Pacific/eastern Indian Ocean in the latter half of the 20th century (Church et al, 2004). A smaller region of negative coefficients can be seen in the northern North Atlantic.…”
Section: Accelerations In Regional Time Seriesmentioning
confidence: 98%
“…The entity including its opposite phase, La Niña Modoki, is referred to as ENSO Modoki. Similar but not identical terms describing departures from conventional ENSO include ''Dateline ENSO'' [Larkin and Harrison, 2005], or ''Trans Niño'' oscillation [Trenberth et al, 2002]. During an El Niño Modoki event, there are two anomalous Walker Circulation cells in the troposphere, instead of the single-celled pattern of the conventional El Niño.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%