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2.5 Monitoring El Niño: Rossby and Kelvin waves
Using altimeter data for climate studies.
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El Niño is a climatic phenomenon occurring in the Pacific Ocean every two to ten years. During an El Niño event, a few months before Christmas anomalous warm water accumulates off the coast of Peru.
The El Niño event that occurred in 1997 was a good example of where satellite altimetry made a major contribution to monitoring such phenomena.
Data used
No particular reprocessing of altimeter data is necessary in this case, so it is possible to use ready-made maps of Sea Level Anomalies. As combined data offer the best quality, and delayed-time the optimal orbit, we have chosen the merged DT-MSLA dataset, up-to-date ('Upd') data for better quality for a given date, and reference ('Ref') data for long temporal studies (see the second part: 'Ocean planetary waves').
Methodology
Temporal extraction
Download MSLAs from 1992 to 2005. This could take some time (!), if necessary you can reduce the data period to 1996-2000. The main advantage of selecting such a long time period is to put the El Niño event into context.
Geographic extraction
Data selection concerns the Pacific Ocean, and specifically the following coordinates: 30°S-30°N,170°W-120°W (fig 1).
Temporal series of MSLA
- Compute the geographic average for SLAs corresponding to the area defined by (5°S-5°N, 170°W-120°W). The value obtained, for a given time, represents the mean sea level anomaly over the equator in the Pacific Ocean. This averaged SLA shall now be referred to as M.
- Plot the curve M=f(t) in order to show the temporal variations in M all along the chosen period.
The diagram shows periodic oscillations in M and illustrates the annual variability in sea surface heights. Moreover M's value significantly increased in 1997 to over 25 cm: the signature of an occurring El Niño. Then, from summer 1998, sea surface height oscillations began again.
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 fig 1: Area for data extraction
 fig 2: Temporal series of MSLAs in the El Niño area
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1997 El Niño
Focusing on 1997 enables us to consider specifically the month of November as an indicator of El Niño's intensity. Using only the fourth MSLA datasets available for November 1997, a new monthly mean map can be plotted (fig 3, simply re-enlarge the selected area to 30°S/30°N). This gives an overview of El Niño's distribution throughout the Equatorial Pacific Ocean during the month of November.
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Monthly Mean of Maps of Sea Level Anomalies, El Niño area, during November 1997.
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It is now acknowledged that an El Niño event is caused by significant changes in wind stress; it thus provides a good example of existing interactions between ocean and atmosphere. However, sea surface slope changes, in terms of space and time scales, involve planetary waves (ie those with long wavelengths, that can travel thousands of kilometres). These are known as Kelvin waves and Rossby waves.
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All rights reserved, copyright © 2006-2009
Tutorial produced by CLS under contract to ESA and CNES
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