
That's 6C already!

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Hurricaneman wrote:The next month will be crucial as currently according to tropical tidbits the ENSO 1-2 are well below normal and it seems as though the ENSO 3 area is dropping currently to about .1 above normal because the only ENSO area thats EL Nino like is the 4 region and its near +1.5 which is the main reason that the ENSO 3\4 region is at +.7 but that warm subsurface is of some interest but will the MJO do what its been doing the last few months and not fully circle the Pacific and not have the WWB make it across and not bring those subsuface anoalies to the surface or will the MJO pulse actually make it all the way across the Pacific with the WWB and help make El Nino go more traditional thats the real question
Ntxw wrote:Strength and placement of large scale SST's is a more important figure. We've seen time and again ENSO 1+2 can drastically change very quickly either way.
Yellow Evan wrote:Ntxw wrote:Strength and placement of large scale SST's is a more important figure. We've seen time and again ENSO 1+2 can drastically change very quickly either way.
Well, the warm SST's are displaced to the west than normal El Ninos, hence the Modoki look. It is something to keep an eye on.
Ntxw wrote:February PDO is out. Down a little from January but still outrageously high at +2.30. In fact it is the highest February +PDO on record back to record keeping. Just crazy. March is going to come in with another very high value.
cycloneye wrote:Ntxw,with the big MJO pulse comming,the big WWB that is going to sweep eastward but still the 4 areas are cooling,what is going on?
cycloneye wrote:This discussion about the PDO was posted at WU and I found it good to share it here.
For the 3rd month in a row, according to JISAO, the ongoing +PDO is once again in record territory (@ +2.30), easily beating out February 1941...
Thus, this past winter's averaged PDO was also a record, & by a wide margin...
The top 7 & 8 of these top 10 +PDO winters (all except 1983-84 & 1926-27) were juxtaposed within multi-year El Ninos/+ENSO events. That's very likely not just mere coincidence. I've been under the impression until recently that for the most part the PDO is largely an artifact of or a reddened response to ENSO, perhaps there's more of a two-way relationship, particularly with exceptional wintertime +PDO regimes influencing the longevity of El Ninos (i.e. extreme +PDOs favoring longer El Ninos). Of course, last spring's extraordinary downwelling Kelvin Wave, lacking an extraordinary ENSO response like it's 1997-98 counterpart, contributed appreciably to this current configuration, w/ a considerable proportion of this displaced & anomalously warm water from the West Pacific warm pool being flushed into the extratropical North Pacific...
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