15th Conference on Hydrology
11th Symposium on Global Change Studies

J1.19

Impacts of Surface Processes over Land and Ocean on Summer Precipitation and Subtropical High

Guoxiong Wu, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Beijing, China; and Y. Liu, H. Liu, P. Liu, and W. Li

Comparison experiments based upon the Global Ocean- Atmosphere- Land System model developed at LASG (IAP/LASG GOALS) were designed to study the impacts of sensible and latent heat flux over land and ocean surfaces on the mean July distributions of precipitation and subtropical high, and on the seasonal variation of the Asian circulation. Results show that, the strong surface sensible heat fluxes over North America and North Africa in summer are very important for the configurations of the subtropical anticyclones over the North Pacific and North Atlantic Oceans. Through changing the recycling precipitation ratio, the surface latent heat flux over land surface affects apparently the distribution of global precipitation. It is also shown that the surface sensible heat flux of the Tibetan Plateau is the basic factor that causes the abrupt seasonal transition from winter to summer of the circulation in the surrounding area.

Joint Session 1, Surface/Atmosphere Interactions: Invited Session (Joint with the 15th Conference on Hydrology and 11th Symposium on Global Change Studies)
Wednesday, 12 January 2000, 8:00 AM-4:59 PM

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