NASA/TP-209961, Wilson, Robert M., On the Bimodality of ENSO Cycle Extremes, Space Science Department, Science Directorate, NASA Marshall Space Flight Center, AL 35812, February 2000, pp. 24, Format(s): PDF 227k |
On the basis of sea surface temperature in the El Nino 3.4 region (5 deg N.,-5 deg. S.,120-170 deg. W.) during the interval of 1950-1997, Kevin Trenberth previously has identified some 16 El Nino and 10 La Nina, these 26 events representing the extremes of the quasi-periodic El Nino-Southern Oscillation (ENSO) cycle. Runs testing shows that the duration, recurrence period, and sequencing of these extremes vary randomly. Hence, the decade of the 1990's, especially for El Nino, is not significantly different from that of previous decadal epochs, at least, on the basis of the frequency of onsets of ENSO extremes. Additionally, the distribution of duration for both El Nino and La Nina looks strikingly bimodal, each consisting of two preferred modes, about 8- and 16-mo long for Nino and about 9- and 18-mo long for La Nina, as does the distribution of the recurrence period for El Nino, consisting of two preferred modes about 21- and 50-mo long. Scatterplots of the recurrence period versus duration for El Nino are found to be statistically important, displaying preferential associations that link shorter (longer) duration with shorter (longer) recurrence periods. Because the last onset of El Nino occurred in April 1997 and the event was of longer than average duration, onset of the next anticipated El Nino is not expected until February 2000 or later
| Keywords: | enso, el nino, climatic change, climate |
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| Subjects: | Geoscience: Meteorological and Climatology: Weather Forecasting |
| ID Code: | 514 |
| Deposited On: | 30 July 2002 |