LarryWx wrote:Kingarabian wrote:MJO is in the region but there are some strong daily negatives on the SOI this week. Has pushed the 30 day SOI back in negative territory.
They’re about bottoming now and should head back up shortly. What’s been driving the recent strong -SOI days have been very high Darwin SLPs. For those who don’t follow the SOI closely, a developing La Niña favors +SOIs in late spring and especially summer+. AN Tahiti SLP and BN Darwin SLP correlates to +SOI.
But recent Darwin SLPs have been anything but low. On the contrary, we just had 2 days of 1017.55+ with today in highly rarified territory at 1017.85. How rare is 1017.85?
Since 1991 and prior to today, there had been only 4 days with Darwin SLP of 1017.85+:
1018.35: June 22, 2004
1017.90: July 25, 2023
1017.90: Aug 5, 2023
1017.85: Aug 12, 1994
Note that all of these other 4 1017.85+ Darwin days were during an incoming or already existent 1st year El Niño. That’s far from the case now.
Since 1991 there’s been only one day during a year with a first year Niña immediately following a Nino that had a Darwin SLP >1017 mb: the 1017.15 mb of Aug 12, 1995.
For Niña following Nino, highest daily Darwin SLP:
1995: 1017.15
1998: 1015.35
2005: 1016.00
2007: 1016.00
2010: 1014.65
2016: 1015.25
And it's been correlating with stubborn positive Nino 3.4 anomalies at the surface and subsurface.
What's interesting is that during incoming La Nina's, in July the MJO slows down and amplifies just between the IO and the MC. Instead it seems that it will be getting stronger over the Pacific. This is a crucial MJO passage because if it can get stronger over the MC vs the Pacific, weak La Nina is pretty much gauranteed for ASO.