Comparison of Different El Niño and La Niña
Events
| While El Niño
and La Niña are often associated with consistent climate
anomalies throughout the globe, differences in the tropical SST
pattern, basic atmospheric state over the globe and "random"
climate variability mean that the climate anomalies may not be the
same from event to event. These plots give an indication of how
similar and how different the atmosphere can be during
events. |
| Go to preplotted comparisons of:
|
Compare different variables for El
Niño and La Niña events using the:
Examine average winter and summer ENSO associated
climates
|
Based on NCEP/NCAR Reanalysis Dataset Variable
Comparison of 4
El Niño events (JAN -
Present)
OLR is a measure of cloudtop temperature. Where the
temperature is low, the cloudtop is high indicating the presence of
"convection" (precipitation) in the region.
Data are averaged over 10N to 10S.
Temperature
during El Niño. [ps
(18M)]
Precipitation during
El Niño [ps
(18M)]
Temperature during
La Niña. [ps
(18M)]
Precipitation
during La Niña
[ps (18M)]
For a more complete look at temperature and precipitation in the
US, see the Climate Prediction Center's
La Nina and
El Nino impact pages.
ENSO Index:
Comparison of the 1997-8 El Nino with other events
