The Madden-Julian Oscillation (MJO) : Michelle L'Heureux NOAA Climate Prediction Center (CPC)
The Madden-Julian Oscillation (MJO) : Michelle L'Heureux NOAA Climate Prediction Center (CPC)
The Madden-Julian Oscillation (MJO) : Michelle L'Heureux NOAA Climate Prediction Center (CPC)
Outline
What is the MJO?: General characteristics and structure What causes the MJO?: Theories How do we monitor the MJO?: Tools, methods and data
MJO Characteristics
The MJO is an intraseasonal or subseasonal fluctuation originating in the tropics
Typical period of the MJO cycle is approximately 30-60 days Acts on a global spatial scale Coherent eastward propagation (Eastern Hemisphere: 5 m/s and Western Hemisphere 15 m/s)
Madden and Julian, 1971; 1972; Zhang, 2005; Hendon and Salby, 1994
MJO Characteristics
The MJO is most active during the boreal late fall, winter and early spring periods
Hendon et al. 1999; Zhang and Gottschalck 2002; Zhang 2005
Matthews, 2000
MJO Structure
8 phases altering patterns of:
Tropical Rainfall (cloud) Winds (green arrows) Sea level pressure (red/blue shading)
Convective signal strongest across the Indian Ocean, Indonesia and Western Pacific
Circulation signal transverses the globe
Not all elements of the MJO -- convection, zonal wind, moisture convergence, and SST anomalies -- are clearly visible for each event Only when averaging many MJO events together does a less noisy, idealized picture of the MJO emerge
Brown areas
Decreased rainfall, Suppressed phase of the MJO
mm/day
MJO Mechanisms
The mechanisms for MJO development, maintenance and decay are not well understood
No one theory completely explains the mechanisms for the period, zonal scale and eastward propagation of the MJO
Zhang, 2005
MJO Mechanisms
Two main hypotheses:
(1) Independent external forcing
Stationary intraseasonal oscillations in the Asian-Australian monsoon region excite the MJO Stochastic forcing Extratropical disturbances interact with the Tropics to force the MJO
Blue ovals highlight the MJO intraseasonal convection through time-space filtering
Envelope of all of these convective elements (large and small, fast or slow) is what travels eastward with time (black dashed line)
MJO event during late 2007 Boxes indicate enhanced westerly (red) and easterly (blue) anomalies and low-level convergence (black circle) when the enhanced convective phase of the MJO is centered over the eastern Indian Ocean
C
C A
Anticyclonic (A) and cyclonic (C) circulations straddling anomalous tropical convection Westerly anomalies across the eastern equatorial Pacific Ocean Enhanced phase of the MJO (black circle) centered across Indonesia
values of the PCs from two leading modes The triangular areas indicate the location of the MJO enhanced convective phase Counter-clockwise motion is indicative of eastward propagation. Large dot is the most recent day.
Weak MJO
Strong MJO
--based on combined EOF analysis (OLR, 850 and 200 hPa zonal wind)
Wheeler and Hendon, 2004
http://cawcr.gov.au/staff/mwheeler/maproom/RMM/ts.PCvar91drm.gif
The MJO variability is greatest during the Northern Hemisphere winter (Jan.- Mar.) and is weakest during the summer (June-Aug.)
http://cawcr.gov.au/staff/mwheeler/maproom/RMM/ts.PCvar.seasonal cycle.gif
While not shown here, keep in mind that the MJO also influences tropical cyclone activity in all ocean basins, monsoon systems, and can affect the evolution of the ENSO cycle.
Boreal Summer
Over Central/ S. America/Caribbean: Enhanced rainfall during Phases 7, 8, & 1. Suppressed rainfall during Phases 3-6.
Over Africa: Enhanced rainfall during Phase 2. Suppressed rainfall during Phases 6-8.
Phase 3
Phase 4
Phase 5 Phase 6
Over SE Asia/Philippines: Enhanced rainfall during Phase 4-6. Suppressed rainfall during Phases 8, 1-2.
Phase 7 Tropical anomalies are strongest just north of the equator during the Northern Hemisphere Summer (wrapped up in monsoon systems) Phase 8
Phase 1
Over South America: Enhanced rainfall during Phases 8 & 1-2 Suppressed rainfall during Phases 4-6. Over SE Asia/Philippines: Enhanced rainfall during Phase 4-5. Suppressed rainfall during Phases 7-8, 1-2.
Over Africa: Enhanced rainfall during Phases 2-3. Suppressed rainfall during Phases 5-6.
Phase 3
Phase 4
Phase 5 Phase 6
Phase 7 Tropical anomalies are strongest just south of the equator during the Northern Hemisphere Winter (wrapped up in monsoon systems) Phase 8
Phase 1
H L L H H
Average 500-hPa geopotential height anomalies based on two cluster patterns (out of 7- not shown)
These patterns have a close relationship with the propagation of the MJO during Dec.-Mar.
AO/NAO result is consistent with analysis by Cassou (2008), LHeureux and Higgins (2008), Lin et al. (2009)
Initial condition:
Phase 1 Phase 2 Phase 3 Phase 4 Phase 5 Phase 6 Phase 7 Orange color shows % frequency of the pattern above climatology Green shows % frequency of the pattern less than climatology
Climo is all DecemberMarch days from 1979-2010
Colors are 95% significant based on Monte Carlo Markov Chain test
Phase 8
x-axis: Days (0-40) after MJO Phase X
NCPE
CANM
UKME
Differences in: (1) Ensemble spread (2) Propagation speed (3) Amplitude ECMF BOME
Gottschalck et al. 2010
Useful skill (r > 0.5): Persistence: 8 days Simple statistical: 15 days POAMA model: 16/19 days One of the first studies to show comparable skill between dynamical and statistical models
Statistical MJO forecasts from several different methods (lagged regression, constructed analog, etc.) are generally comparable Rashid et al. 2010
Panel on left shows anomaly correlation based on GEFS ensemble mean as a function of MJO phase in the initial condition
Questions?