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ENSO and West Pacific Seasonality Driven by the South Asian Monsoon
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  • PJ Tuckman,
  • Jane E Smyth,
  • Jingyuan Li,
  • Nicholas Lutsko,
  • John C Marshall
PJ Tuckman
Massachusetts Institute of Technology

Corresponding Author:tuckmanp@gmail.com

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Jane E Smyth
Massachusetts Institute of Technology
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Jingyuan Li
Scripps Institution of Oceanography
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Nicholas Lutsko
Scripps Institution of Oceanography.
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John C Marshall
Massachusetts Institute of Technology
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Abstract

The Equatorial Pacific and ENSO have climatologically important seasonal cycles, with maximum Western Pacific SSTs occurring during boreal autumn and ENSO events peaking during boreal winter. In this work, we use the concept of a monsoonal mode to show that the presence of a large landmass in the northern hemisphere leads to this seasonal cycle. Specifically, warm air moving east from the Asian summer monsoon suppresses surface fluxes in the West Pacific, leading to increased heat content there during the following months. This, in turn, enhances ENSO growth rates during boreal autumn and causes ENSO events to peak in boreal winter.