Title: Michael Ghil
1A toy model of ENSO variability Structural
instability and spontaneous transitions in
extremes
Michael Ghil
Ilya Zaliapin
and
Ecole Normale Supérieure, Paris,
Univ. of Nevada, Reno, NV, USA
and Univ. of California, Los Angeles
zal_at_unr.edu
ghil_at_lmd.ens.fr
European Geosciences Union, General Assembly,
1520 April 2007, Vienna
2Outline
Motivation
Model formulation
Results
Theoretical results
Phase locking and Devil's staircase
Spontaneous changes in mean and extremes
Concluding remarks
M. Ghil I. Zaliapin, EGU Assembly, April 16,
2007
3Motivation choice of topic
- Climate models are among the most detailed and
sophisticated models - of natural phenomena in existence.
- Still, the range of uncertainty in responses to
either CO2 doubling or to various emission
scenarios is not decreasing from one IPCC report
to the next. - Is this merely a stubborn engineering problem in
tuning model parameters or is it a matter of
intrinsic sensitivity to such parameters and to
model parameterizations, similar to but distinct
from sensitivity to initial data? - Dynamical systems theory has, so far, interpreted
model robustness mostly in terms of structural
stability. - 5. It turns out that this property is not
generic (see also Session NP5.01 "Robust
estimates of climate change and the
generalization of structural stability" by - M. Ghil, M. Chekroun and E. Simonnet, Lecture
Room 22, Thursday at 1030 a.m.). - 6. We explore the structurally unstable
behavior of a very simple, but interesting model
of ENSO variability, the interplay between
forcing and internal variability, as well as
spontaneous changes in mean and extremes.
M. Ghil I. Zaliapin, EGU Assembly, April 16,
2007
4Motivation choice of "toy model"
Differential Delay Equations (DDE) offer an
effective modeling language as they combine
simplicity of formulation with rich behavior
To gain some intuition, compare
ODE
DDE
The general solution is given by
The only solution is
i.e., exponential growth (or decay, for ? lt 0)
In particular, oscillatory solutions do exist.
M. Ghil I. Zaliapin, EGU Assembly, April 16,
2007
5Model formulation
Thermocline depth deviations from the annual
mean in the eastern Pacific
Wind-forced ocean waves (Eward Kelvin, Wward
Rossby)
Delay due to finite wave velocity
Seasonal-cycle forcing
M. Ghil I. Zaliapin, EGU Assembly, April 16,
2007
6Model parameters
Wind-forced ocean waves (Kelvin, Rossby)
Strength of the atmosphere-ocean coupling
M. Ghil I. Zaliapin, EGU Assembly, April 16,
2007
7Model parameters (cont'd)
The seasonal-cycle forcing has the period P0
P0 (2??)1 1 yr,
and we consider the following parameter ranges
The initial data for our DDE are given by the
constant history (warm event)
M. Ghil I. Zaliapin, EGU Assembly, April 16,
2007
8Model general results
With no seasonal forcing we have
For large delays, the solution is
asymptotically periodic, with period 4t
For small delays, the solution is
asymptotically zero, as it is for no delay (ODE
case)
M. Ghil I. Zaliapin, EGU Assembly, April 16,
2007
9Model general results (cont'd)
accordingly, for
For large delays, there are nonlinear
interactions between periodic solutions with
periods 4t and 1
For small delays, the solution is
asymptotically periodic with period 1, as for
the no- delay (ODE) case
M. Ghil I. Zaliapin, EGU Assembly, April 16,
2007
10Examples
Period 4t
No period
Simple period 1
Complex period 1
Rough period 1
Period 1
M. Ghil I. Zaliapin, EGU Assembly, April 16,
2007
11Noteworthy scenarios (1)
Low-h (cold) seasons in successive years have
a period of about 5 yr in this model run. N.B.
Negative h corresponds to NH (boreal) winter
(upwelling season, DJF, in the
eastern Tropical Pacific)
M. Ghil I. Zaliapin, EGU Assembly, April 16,
2007
12Noteworthy scenarios (2)
High-h season with period of about 4 yr notice
the random heights of high seasons N.B. Rough
equivalent of El Niño in this toy
model (little upwelling near coast)
M. Ghil I. Zaliapin, EGU Assembly, April 16,
2007
13Noteworthy scenarios (3)
Bursts of intraseasonal oscillations () of
random amplitude () Madden-Julian
oscillations, westerly-wind bursts?
M. Ghil I. Zaliapin, EGU Assembly, April 16,
2007
14Noteworthy scenarios (4)
- Interdecadal variability
- Spontaneous change of
- long-term annual mean, and
- Higher/lower positive and
- lower/higher negative extremes
- N.B. Intrinsic, rather than forced!
M. Ghil I. Zaliapin, EGU Assembly, April 16,
2007
15Critical transitions
Our toy model produces several types of temporal
behavior.
Is transition from one type to another smooth or
sudden?
We answer this question by studying
the period map
trajectory statistics (max, tail, etc.)
M. Ghil I. Zaliapin, EGU Assembly, April 16,
2007
16Devil's staircase phase locking
M. Ghil I. Zaliapin, EGU Assembly, April 16,
2007
17Devil's staircase small forcing and short delays
Period dependence on delay for b 0.03, k ? 100
The period is always given by
and it is always close to an integer.
M. Ghil I. Zaliapin, EGU Assembly, April 16,
2007
18Devil's bleachers for small forcing and small
delay
Regime diagram for the period index
M. Ghil I. Zaliapin, EGU Assembly, April 16,
2007
19Critical transitions (1)
Trajectory maximum (after transient) k 0.5
Smooth map
Monotonic in b
Periodic in t
M. Ghil I. Zaliapin, EGU Assembly, April 16,
2007
20Critical transitions (3)
Trajectory maximum (after transient) k ??2
Neutral curve f (b, t????? appears, above
which instabilities set in.
Above this curve, the maxima are no longer
monotonic in b or periodic in t??and the map
crinkles (i.e., it becomes rough)
M. Ghil I. Zaliapin, EGU Assembly, April 16,
2007
21Examples of instability (1)
Instability point
M. Ghil I. Zaliapin, EGU Assembly, April 16,
2007
22Examples of instability (2)
Instability point
M. Ghil I. Zaliapin, EGU Assembly, April 16,
2007
23Concluding remarks
- A simple differential-delay equation (DDE) with a
single delay reproduces the - Devils staircase scenario documented in other
ENSO models, such as - nonlinear PDEs and GCMs, as well as in
observations. - 2. The model illustrates well the role of the
distinct parameters, such as strength of seasonal
forcing b vs. nonlinearity ? (ocean-atmosphere
coupling) and delay ? (propagation period of
oceanic waves across the Tropical Pacific). - Spontaneous transitions in mean temperature
(i.e., thermocline depth), as well - as in extreme annual values occur, for purely
periodic, seasonal forcing. - 4. The model generates intraseasonal
(Madden-Julian?) oscillations of various periods
and amplitudes (westerly wind bursts?), as well
as interdecadal variability. - A sharp neutral curve in the (b?) plane
separates smooth behavior of the period map from
rough behavior changes in this neutral curve
as ? changes are under study. - The various types of instabilities across this
neutral curve are being explored. - We expect such behavior in much more detailed and
realistic models, where it is harder to describe
its causes as completely.
M. Ghil I. Zaliapin, EGU Assembly, April 16,
2007
24References
- Ghil, M., and A. W. Robertson, 2000 Solving
problems with GCMs General circulation models
and their role in the climate modeling hierarchy.
General Circulation Model Development Past,
Present and Future, D. Randall (Ed.), Academic
Press, San Diego, pp. 285325. - Hale, J. K., 1977 Theory of Functional
Differential Equations, Springer-Verlag, New
York, 365 pp. - Jin, F.-f., J. D. Neelin and M. Ghil, 1994 El
Niño on the Devil's Staircase Annual subharmonic
steps to chaos, Science, 264, 7072. - Saunders, A., and M. Ghil, 2001 A Boolean delay
equation model of ENSO variability, Physica D,
160, 5478. - Tziperman, E., L. Stone, M. Cane and H. Jarosh,
1994 El Niño chaos Overlapping of resonances
between the seasonal cycle and the Pacific
ocean-atmosphere oscillator. Science, 264,
7274. - Munnich, M., M. Cane, and S. Zebiak, 1991 A
study of self-excited oscillations of the
tropical ocean atmosphere system 2. Nonlinear
cases , J. Atmos. Sci., 48, 12381248.
M. Ghil I. Zaliapin, EGU Assembly, April 16,
2007
25Reserve slides
26Critical transitions (2)
Trajectory maximum (after transient) k 1
Smooth map
No longer monotonic in b, for large t
No longer periodic in t?? for large t
M. Ghil I. Zaliapin, EGU Assembly, April 16,
2007
27Critical transitions (4)
Trajectory maximum (after transient) k ??11
The neutral curve moves to higher seasonal
forcing b and lower delays ?.
The neutral curve that separates rough from
smooth behavior becomes itself crinkled (rough,
fractal?).
M. Ghil I. Zaliapin, EGU Assembly, April 16,
2007
28Examples of instability (3)
M. Ghil I. Zaliapin, EGU Assembly, April 16,
2007
29Examples of instability (4)
M. Ghil I. Zaliapin, EGU Assembly, April 16,
2007