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Science 16 June 2000: Vol. 288. no. 5473, pp. 1997 - 2002 DOI: 10.1126/science.288.5473.1997
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Review
Is El Niño Changing?
Alexey V. Fedorov,
S. George Philander
Recent advances in observational and theoretical studies
of El Niño have shed light on controversies concerning the
possible effect of global warming on this phenomenon over the past few decades and in the future. El Niño is now understood to be one phase of a natural mode of oscillation--La Niña is the
complementary phase--that results from unstable interactions between
the tropical Pacific Ocean and the atmosphere. Random disturbances
maintain this neutrally stable mode, whose properties depend on the
background (time-averaged) climate state. Apparent changes in the
properties of El Niño could reflect the importance of random
disturbances, but they could also be a consequence of decadal
variations of the background state. The possibility that global warming
is affecting those variations cannot be excluded.
Department of Geosciences, Princeton University, Princeton, NJ
08544, USA.
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