Influence of the sea surface temperature anomaly over the Indian Ocean in March on the summer rainfall in Xinjiang

被引:9
作者
Yang Zhou
Anning Huang
Yong Zhao
Qing Yang
Jing Jiang
Mengke La
机构
[1] Nanjing University,School of Atmospheric Sciences
[2] China Meteorology Administration,Institute of Desert Meteorology
[3] Nanjing University,Institute of Environmental Planning and Design, Co., Ltd.
来源
Theoretical and Applied Climatology | 2015年 / 119卷
关键词
Indian Ocean; Tibetan Plateau; Regional Climate Model; Geopotential Height; Summer Rainfall;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
This study explores the relationship between the sea surface temperature over the Indian Ocean (IOSST) in March and the summer rainfall in Xinjiang. In the observations, the IOSST in March significantly correlates with the summer rainfall in Xinjiang with a correlation coefficient of about 0.49 during 1961–2007. This relationship is independent from the El Niño Southern Oscillation (ENSO), with a partial correlation coefficient of about 0.40–0.48 controlling for the ENSO indices from December to March. In addition to the observations, three sets of numerical sensitivity experiments are conducted with a regional climate model (RegCM4.3). The model results show that warm IOSST can excite a negative anomaly of geopotential height at 500 hPa over the Indian Ocean in March. This anomaly stays over the tropical Indian Ocean, and then propagates north to central Asia in June. Consequently, the anomalous wind associated with this geopotential height anomaly transports moisture from the Persian Gulf and the coast of Iran to Xinjiang, passing over Pakistan and the Tibetan Plateau. Therefore, the warm (cold) IOSST in March tends to cause the increase (decrease) of the summer rainfall over Xinjiang, especially in the Tian Shan and Kunlun Mountains.
引用
收藏
页码:781 / 789
页数:8
相关论文
共 107 条
[1]  
Ashok K(2003)Influence of the Indian Ocean dipole on the Australian winter rainfall Geophys Res Lett 30 1821-3594
[2]  
Guan Z(2005)Modulation of daily precipitation over Southwest Asia by the Madden–Julian Oscillation Mon Weather Rev 133 3579-354
[3]  
Yamagata T(2012)Precipitation climate of Central Asia and the large-scale atmospheric circulation Theor Appl Climatol 108 345-374
[4]  
Barlow M(1959)An operational objective analysis system Mon Weather Rev 87 367-2940
[5]  
Wheeler M(1996)Sea surface temperature fields associated with West African rainfall anomaly types J Clim 9 2935-6
[6]  
Lyon B(2012)The road towards RegCM4 Clim Res 52 3-1245
[7]  
Cullen H(2011)Support for global climate reorganization during the “Medieval Climate Anomaly” Clim Dyn 37 1217-1575
[8]  
Bothe O(1990)A high resolution air mass transformation model for short-range weather forecasting Mon Weather Rev 118 1561-745
[9]  
Fraedrich K(2003)Long-term climate variations in China and global warming signals J Geophys Res 108 4614-470
[10]  
Zhu XH(2013)Rising rever flows throughout the twenty-first centrury in two Himalayan glaciered watersheds Nat Geosci 6 742-2846