Tropical Warm Pool

The Tropical Warm Pool (TWP) or Indo-Pacific Warm Pool is a mass of ocean water located in the western Pacific Ocean and eastern Indian Ocean which consistently exhibits the highest water temperatures over the largest expanse of the Earth's surface.[1] Its intensity and extent appear to oscillate over a time period measured in decades.[2]

The Indo-Pacific warm pool has been warming rapidly and expanding during the recent decades, largely in response to increased carbon emissions from fossil fuel burning.[3] The warm pool expanded double its size, from an area of 22 million km2 during 1900–1980, to an area of 40 million km2 during 1981–2018.[4] This expansion of the warm pool has altered global rainfall patterns, by changing the life cycle of the Madden Julian Oscillation (MJO), which is the most dominant mode of weather fluctuation originating in the tropics.[4][5]

See also

References

  1. USGS News Release Jan. 28, 2011
  2. NASA: "Reverberations of the Pacific Warm Pool"
  3. Weller, Evan; Min, Seung-Ki; Cai, Wenju; Zwiers, Francis W.; Kim, Yeon-Hee; Lee, Donghyun (2016-07-01). "Human-caused Indo-Pacific warm pool expansion". Science Advances. 2 (7): e1501719. doi:10.1126/sciadv.1501719. ISSN 2375-2548.
  4. Roxy, M. K.; Dasgupta, Panini; McPhaden, Michael J.; Suematsu, Tamaki; Zhang, Chidong; Kim, Daehyun (November 2019). "Twofold expansion of the Indo-Pacific warm pool warps the MJO life cycle". Nature. 575 (7784): 647–651. doi:10.1038/s41586-019-1764-4. ISSN 1476-4687.
  5. "Warm pool expansion warps MJO – Climate Research Lab, CCCR, IITM". Retrieved 2019-11-29.
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