News Release

Driver of El Niño on orbital-cycle timescales

Peer-Reviewed Publication

Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences

A study of sea surface temperatures and the thermocline, a subsurface water layer in which temperature decreases rapidly with depth, in the western equatorial Pacific over the past 142,000 years finds a cycle in thermocline temperature with a time-scale of half an orbital precession, around 9,400 or 12,700 years, that is directly linked to temperature fluctuations of the El Niño-Southern Oscillation; the link may arise from the interplay of incoming solar radiation between the two hemispheres and highlights the thermocline as a likely driver of climate change in orbital cycles, according to the authors.

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Article #19-15510: "Half-precessional cycle of thermocline temperature in the western equatorial Pacific and its bihemispheric dynamics," by Zhimin Jian et al.

MEDIA CONTACT: Zhimin Jian, Tongji University, Shanghai, CHINA; e-mail: jian@tongji.edu.cn


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