Joint Seminar: Climate whiplash effects due to rapidly intensifying El Niño cycles” (Axel Timmermann, Malte Stuecker, Sen Zhao)

The TRR 181 seminar Series/Joint Seminar is held by Axel Timmermann (Pusan National University, South Korea) on November 20th, 11:00 am (only online)

Climate whiplash effects due to rapidly intensifying El Niño cycles” (Axel Timmermann, Malte Stuecker, Sen Zhao)

Abstract

The El Niño-Southern Oscillation (ENSO) influences global climate variability, encompassing various other modes of variability, and thus represents a key predictable climate signal on seasonal timescales. Yet, its response to greenhouse warming remains uncertain, with models projecting a range of outcomes. Here, we demonstrate that in response to warming, a state-of-the-art high-resolution climate model simulates a rapid transition from a moderate-amplitude irregular regime, as observed in the current climate, to a highly regular oscillation with intensifying amplitude. This behaviour can be attributed to increasing air-sea feedbacks, which approach criticality in the second half of this century, and growing atmospheric noise. As ENSO intensifies in this model, it synchronizes with other prominent climate modes, such as the North Atlantic Oscillation and the Indian Ocean Dipole, thereby imprinting its regular, predictable variability on them. If realized, this global climate mode resonance would have wide-ranging whiplash impacts on regional hydroclimates.