La niña: Difference between revisions

From Glossary of Meteorology
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<div class="definition"><div class="short_definition">The most common of several names given to a significant decrease in [[sea surface temperature]]  ("cold events") in the central and eastern equatorial Pacific.</div><br/> <div class="paragraph">La Ni&#x000F1;a is the counterpart to the [[El Ni&#x000F1;o|El Niño]] "warm event," and its spatial and temporal evolution  in the equatorial Pacific is, to a considerable extent, the mirror image of El Ni&#x000F1;o, although La  Ni&#x000F1;a events tend to be somewhat less regular in their behavior and duration. <br/>''See also'' [[Enso|ENSO]].</div><br/> </div><div class="reference">Philander, S. George 1990. El Ni&#x000F1;o, La Ni&#x000F1;a, and the Southern Oscillation. Academic Press, International  Geophysics Series, Vol. 46.. </div><br/>  
<div class="definition"><div class="short_definition">The most common of several names given to a significant decrease in [[sea surface temperature]]  ("cold events") in the central and eastern equatorial Pacific.</div><br/> <div class="paragraph">La Ni&#x000F1;a is the counterpart to the [[El niño|El Niño]] "warm event," and its spatial and temporal evolution  in the equatorial Pacific is, to a considerable extent, the mirror image of El Ni&#x000F1;o, although La  Ni&#x000F1;a events tend to be somewhat less regular in their behavior and duration. <br/>''See also'' [[Enso|ENSO]].</div><br/> </div><div class="reference">Philander, S. George 1990. El Ni&#x000F1;o, La Ni&#x000F1;a, and the Southern Oscillation. Academic Press, International  Geophysics Series, Vol. 46.. </div><br/>  
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Revision as of 09:47, 4 December 2013



La Niña

The most common of several names given to a significant decrease in sea surface temperature ("cold events") in the central and eastern equatorial Pacific.

La Niña is the counterpart to the El Niño "warm event," and its spatial and temporal evolution in the equatorial Pacific is, to a considerable extent, the mirror image of El Niño, although La Niña events tend to be somewhat less regular in their behavior and duration.
See also ENSO.

Philander, S. George 1990. El Niño, La Niña, and the Southern Oscillation. Academic Press, International Geophysics Series, Vol. 46..


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