17th Conference on Air Sea Interaction

10.2

Role of local air-sea interaction on south Asian monsoon in a changing climate

H. Annamalai, University of Hawaii/SOEST, Honolulu, HI

Diagnosis of CMIP3 integrations indicate that in a warmer planet the south Asian summer monsoon circulation weakens while rainfall over continental India increases. An analysis of mixed-layer heat budget suggests that the weakened monsoon circulation promotes SST warming over the Arabian Sea via : (i) reduced upwelling off Somalia, and (ii) deepening of the thermocline over the western Indian Ocean. Subsequently, evaporation increases over the northern Indian Ocean leading to enhanced rainfall over India.

In a warming planet, compared to basin-wide warming of about 3-4 C over the equatorial Pacific what is the importance of ~ 0.5-1.5 C warming over the tropical Indian Ocean on the mean monsoon evolution? To answer this question, a 30-member ensemble simulation of 90-days duration with GFDL_AM2.1 was performed. The model results suggest that without the local warming, the monsoon circulation collapses. The processes responsible for the collapse will be discussed.

wrf recordingRecorded presentation

Session 10, The Role of Air-Sea Interaction on Climate Change
Thursday, 30 September 2010, 10:30 AM-12:00 PM, Capitol AB

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