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Dive into the research topics where Xiao-Tong Zheng is active.

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Featured researches published by Xiao-Tong Zheng.


Journal of Climate | 2010

Decadal Shift in El Nino Influences on Indo-Western Pacific and East Asian Climate in the 1970s*

Shang-Ping Xie; Yan Du; Gang Huang; Xiao-Tong Zheng; Hiroki Tokinaga; Kaiming Hu; Qinyu Liu

Abstract El Nino’s influence on the subtropical northwest (NW) Pacific climate increased after the climate regime shift of the 1970s. This is manifested in well-organized atmospheric anomalies of suppressed convection and a surface anticyclone during the summer (June–August) of the El Nino decay year [JJA(1)], a season when equatorial Pacific sea surface temperature (SST) anomalies have dissipated. In situ observations and ocean–atmospheric reanalyses are used to investigate mechanisms for the interdecadal change. During JJA(1), the influence of the El Nino–Southern Oscillation (ENSO) on the NW Pacific is indirect, being mediated by SST conditions over the tropical Indian Ocean (TIO). The results here show that interdecadal change in this influence is due to changes in the TIO response to ENSO. During the postregime shift epoch, the El Nino teleconnection excites downwelling Rossby waves in the south TIO by anticyclonic wind curls. These Rossby waves propagate slowly westward, causing persistent SST warmi...


Journal of Climate | 2010

Indian Ocean Dipole Response to Global Warming: Analysis of Ocean–Atmospheric Feedbacks in a Coupled Model*

Xiao-Tong Zheng; Shang-Ping Xie; Gabriel A. Vecchi; Qinyu Liu; Jan Hafner

Abstract Low-frequency modulation and change under global warming of the Indian Ocean dipole (IOD) mode are investigated with a pair of multicentury integrations of a coupled ocean–atmosphere general circulation model: one under constant climate forcing and one forced by increasing greenhouse gas concentrations. In the unforced simulation, there is significant decadal and multidecadal modulation of the IOD variance. The mean thermocline depth in the eastern equatorial Indian Ocean (EEIO) is important for the slow modulation, skewness, and ENSO correlation of the IOD. With a shoaling (deepening) of the EEIO thermocline, the thermocline feedback strengthens, and this leads to an increase in IOD variance, a reduction of the negative skewness of the IOD, and a weakening of the IOD–ENSO correlation. In response to increasing greenhouse gases, a weakening of the Walker circulation leads to easterly wind anomalies in the equatorial Indian Ocean; the oceanic response to weakened circulation is a thermocline shoal...


Journal of Climate | 2012

Interdecadal Variations in ENSO Teleconnection to the Indo–Western Pacific for 1870–2007*

J. S. Chowdary; Shang-Ping Xie; Hiroki Tokinaga; Yuko Okumura; Hisayuki Kubota; Nat Johnson; Xiao-Tong Zheng

AbstractSlow modulation of interannual variability and its relationship to El Nino–Southern Oscillation (ENSO) is investigated for the period of 1870–2007 using shipboard surface meteorological observations along a frequently traveled track across the north Indian Ocean (NIO; from the Gulf of Aden through Malacca Strait) and the South China Sea (to Luzon Strait). During the decades in the late nineteenth–early twentieth century and in the late twentieth century, the El Nino–induced NIO warming persists longer than during the 1910s–mid-1970s, well into the summer following the peak of El Nino. During the epochs of the prolonged NIO warming, rainfall drops and sea level pressure rises over the tropical northwest Pacific in summer following El Nino. Conversely, during the period when the NIO warming dissipates earlier, these atmospheric anomalies are not well developed. This supports the Indian Ocean capacitor concept as a mechanism prolonging El Nino influence into summer through the persistent Indian Ocean...


Journal of Climate | 2014

Global Warming-Induced Changes in El Niño Teleconnections over the North Pacific and North America

Zhen-Qiang Zhou; Shang-Ping Xie; Xiao-Tong Zheng; Qinyu Liu; Hai Wang

AbstractEl Nino–Southern Oscillation (ENSO) induces climate anomalies around the globe. Atmospheric general circulation model simulations are used to investigate how ENSO-induced teleconnection patterns during boreal winter might change in response to global warming in the Pacific–North American sector. As models disagree on changes in the amplitude and spatial pattern of ENSO in response to global warming, for simplicity the same sea surface temperature (SST) pattern of ENSO is prescribed before and after the climate warming. In a warmer climate, precipitation anomalies intensify and move eastward over the equatorial Pacific during El Nino because the enhanced mean SST warming reduces the barrier to deep convection in the eastern basin. Associated with the eastward shift of tropical convective anomalies, the ENSO-forced Pacific–North American (PNA) teleconnection pattern moves eastward and intensifies under the climate warming. By contrast, the PNA mode of atmospheric internal variability remains largely...


Journal of Climate | 2013

Indian Ocean Dipole Response to Global Warming in the CMIP5 Multimodel Ensemble

Xiao-Tong Zheng; Shang-Ping Xie; Yan Du; Lin Liu; Gang Huang; Qinyu Liu

The response of the Indian Ocean dipole (IOD) mode to global warming is investigated based on simulations from phase 5 of the Coupled Model Intercomparison Project (CMIP5). In response to increased greenhouse gases, an IOD-like warming pattern appears in the equatorial Indian Ocean, with reduced (enhanced) warming in the east (west), an easterly wind trend, and thermocline shoaling in the east. Despite a shoaling thermocline and strengthened thermocline feedback in the eastern equatorial Indian Ocean, the interannual variance of the IOD mode remains largely unchanged in sea surface temperature (SST) as atmosphericfeedbackandzonalwindvarianceweakenunderglobalwarming.Thenegativeskewnessineastern Indian Ocean SST is reduced as a result of the shoaling thermocline. The change in interannual IOD variance exhibits some variability among models, and this intermodel variability is correlated with the change in thermocline feedback. The results herein illustrate that mean state changes modulate interannual modes, and suggest that recent changes in the IOD mode are likely due to natural variations.


Climate Dynamics | 2014

Indian Ocean variability in the CMIP5 multi-model ensemble: the zonal dipole mode

Lin Liu; Shang-Ping Xie; Xiao-Tong Zheng; Tim Li; Yan Du; Gang Huang; Weidong Yu

The performance of 21 Coupled Model Intercomparison Project Phase 5 (CMIP5) models in the simulation of the Indian Ocean Dipole (IOD) mode is evaluated. Compared to CMIP3, CMIP5 models exhibit a similar spread in IOD intensity. A detailed diagnosis was carried out to understand whether CMIP5 models have shown improvement in their representation of the important dynamical and thermodynamical feedbacks in the tropical Indian Ocean. These include the Bjerknes dynamic air-sea feedback, which includes the equatorial zonal wind response to sea surface temperature (SST) anomaly, the thermocline response to equatorial zonal wind forcing, the ocean subsurface temperature response to the thermocline variations, and the thermodynamic air-sea coupling that includes the wind-evaporation-SST and cloud-radiation-SST feedback. Compared to CMIP3, the CMIP5 ensemble produces a more realistic positive wind-evaporation-SST feedback during the IOD developing phase, while the simulation of Bjerknes dynamic feedback is more unrealistic especially with regard to the wind response to SST forcing and the thermocline response to surface wind forcing. The overall CMIP5 performance in the IOD simulation does not show remarkable improvements compared to CMIP3. It is further noted that the El Niño-Southern Oscillation (ENSO) and IOD amplitudes are closely related, if a model generates a strong ENSO, it is likely that this model also simulates a strong IOD.


Journal of Climate | 2013

Indian Ocean Variability in the CMIP5 Multimodel Ensemble: The Basin Mode

Yan Du; Shang-Ping Xie; Yali Yang; Xiao-Tong Zheng; Lin Liu; Gang Huang

This study evaluates the simulation of the Indian Ocean Basin (IOB) mode and relevant physical processes in models from phase 5 of the Coupled Model Intercomparison Project (CMIP5). Historical runs from 20 CMIP5 models are available for the analysis. They reproduce the IOB mode and its close relationship to El Nino-Southern Oscillation (ENSO). Half of the models capture key IOB processes: a downwelling oceanic Rossby wave in the southern tropical Indian Ocean (TIO) precedes the IOB development in boreal fall and triggers an antisymmetric wind anomaly pattern across the equator in the following spring. The anomalous wind pattern induces a second warming in the north Indian Ocean (NIO) through summer and sustains anticyclonic wind anomalies in the northwest Pacific by radiating a warm tropospheric Kelvin wave. The second warming in the NIO is indicative of ocean-atmosphere interaction in the interior TIO. More than half of the models display a double peak in NIO warming, as observed following El Nino, while the rest show only one winter peak. The intermodel diversity in the characteristics of the IOB mode seems related to the thermocline adjustment in the south TIO to ENSO-induced wind variations. Almost all the models show multidecadal variations in IOB variance, possibly modulated by ENSO.


Journal of Climate | 2013

Importance of Ocean Dynamics for the Skewness of the Indian Ocean Dipole Mode

Tomomichi Ogata; Shang-Ping Xie; Jian Lan; Xiao-Tong Zheng

AbstractInterannual anomalies of sea surface temperature (SST), wind, and cloudiness in the southeastern tropical Indian Ocean (SE-TIO) show negative skewness. In this research, asymmetry between warm and cold episodes in the SE-TIO and the importance of ocean dynamics are investigated. A coupled model simulation and observations show an asymmetric relationship between SST and the thermocline depth in the SE-TIO where SST is more sensitive to an anomalous shoaling than to deepening of the thermocline. This asymmetric thermocline feedback on SST is a result of a deep mean thermocline. Sensitivity experiments with an ocean general circulation model (OGCM) show that a negative SST skewness arises in response to sinusoidal zonal wind variations that are symmetric between the westerly and easterly phases. Heat budget analysis with an OGCM hindcast also supports the importance of ocean dynamics for SST skewness off Sumatra and Java.


Climate Dynamics | 2013

Impact of Heating Anomalies Associated with Rainfall Variations over the Indo-Western Pacific on Asian Atmospheric Circulation in Winter

Jian Zheng; Qinyu Liu; Chunzai Wang; Xiao-Tong Zheng

Observational data show that the dominant mode of the boreal winter rainfall anomalies in the tropical Indo-Western Pacific (IWP) is a west-east dipolar pattern, which is called the Indo-Western Pacific Dipole (IWPD) mode and is related to El Niño-Southern Oscillation. It is found that corresponded to the IWPD mode is a new atmospheric teleconnection pattern—a wave train pattern emitted from the IWP toward Asia and the northwest Pacific in winter. During the positive (negative) phase of the IWPD, the teleconnection pattern features the negative (positive) anomalies of 200-hPa geopotential height (H200) centered at 30°N, 110°E and the positive (negative) anomalies of H200 centered at 45°N, 140°E. The teleconnection pattern represents the dominant mode of the boreal winter H200 anomaly over Asia. A series of simple atmospheric model experiments are performed to confirm that this winter teleconnection pattern is induced by the heating anomalies associated with the IWPD, and the heating anomalies over the equatorial central Pacific are not important to this teleconnection pattern from the IWP toward Asia and the northeast Pacific. The IWPD is strengthened after the climate regime shift of the 1970s, which leads to a stronger teleconnection pattern.


Journal of Climate | 2011

Response of the Indian Ocean Basin Mode and Its Capacitor Effect to Global Warming

Xiao-Tong Zheng; Shang-Ping Xie; Qinyu Liu

The development of the Indian Ocean basin (IOB) mode and its change under global warming are in- vestigated using a pair of integrations with the Geophysical Fluid Dynamics Laboratory Climate Model version 2.1 (CM2.1). In the simulation under constant climate forcing, the El Nino-induced warming over the tropical Indian Ocean (TIO) and its capacitor effect on summer northwest Pacific climate are reproduced realistically. In the simulation forced by increased greenhouse gas concentrations, the IOB mode and its summercapacitor effectareenhancedinpersistencefollowingElNino,eventhoughtheENSOitselfweakens in response to global warming. In the prior spring, an antisymmetric pattern of rainfall-wind anomalies and the meridional SST gradient across the equator strengthen via increased wind-evaporation-sea surface temperature (WES) feedback. ENSO decays slightly faster in global warming. During the summer following El Nino decay, the resultant decrease in equatorial Pacific SST strengthens the SST contrast with the en- hanced TIO warming, increasing the sea level pressure gradient and intensifying the anomalous anticyclone over the northwest Pacific. The easterly wind anomalies associated with the northwest Pacific anticyclone in turn sustain the SST warming over the north Indian Ocean and South China Sea. Thus, the increased TIO capacitor effect is due to enhanced air-sea interaction over the TIO and with the western Pacific. The implications for the observed intensification of the IOB mode and its capacitor effect after the 1970s are discussed.

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Shang-Ping Xie

University of California

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Qinyu Liu

Ocean University of China

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Gang Huang

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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Yan Du

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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Lin Liu

State Oceanic Administration

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Kaiming Hu

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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Chang Hui

Ocean University of China

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Feiyan Guo

Ocean University of China

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