The claim for a zonal-dipole structure in interannual variations of the tropical Indian Ocean (IO) SSTs-the Indian Ocean dipole (IOD)-is reexamined after accounting for El Niño-Southern Oscillation's (ENSO) influence. The authors seek an a priori accounting of ENSO's seasonally stratified influence on IO SSTs and evaluate the basis of the related dipole mode index, instead of seeking a posteriori adjustments to this index, as common. Scant observational evidence is found for zonal-dipole SST variations after removal of ENSO's influence from IO SSTs: The IOD poles are essentially uncorrelated in the ENSO-filtered SSTs in both recent (1958-98) and century-long (1900-2007) periods, leading to the breakdown of zonal-dipole structure in surface temperature variability; this finding does not depend on the subtleties in estimation of ENSO's influence. Deconstruction of the fall 1994 and 1997 SST anomalies led to their reclassification, with a weak IOD in 1994 and none in 1997. Regressions of the eastern IOD pole on upper-ocean heat content, however, do exhibit a zonal-dipole structure but with the western pole in the central-equatorial IO, suggesting that internally generated basin variability can have zonal-dipole structure at the subsurface. The IO SST variability was analyzed using the extended-EOF technique, after removing the influence of Pacific SSTs; the technique targets spatial and temporal recurrence and extracts modes (rather than patterns) of variability. This spatiotemporal analysis also does not support the existence of zonal-dipole variability at the surface. However, the analysis did yield a dipole-like structure in the meridional direction in boreal fall/ winter, when it resembles the subtropical IOD pattern (but not the evolution time scale).
CITATION STYLE
Zhao, Y., & Nigam, S. (2015). The Indian ocean dipole: A monopole in SST. Journal of Climate, 28(1), 3–19. https://doi.org/10.1175/JCLI-D-14-00047.1
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