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    Projected Changes in East African Rainy Seasons

    Source: Journal of Climate:;2013:;volume( 026 ):;issue: 016::page 5931
    Author:
    Cook, Kerry H.
    ,
    Vizy, Edward K.
    DOI: 10.1175/JCLI-D-12-00455.1
    Publisher: American Meteorological Society
    Abstract: regional climate model with 90-km horizontal resolution on a large domain is used to predict and analyze precipitation changes over East Africa caused by greenhouse gas increases. A pair of six-member ensembles is used: one representing the late twentieth century and another the mid-twenty-first century under a midline emissions scenario. The twentieth-century simulation uses boundary conditions from reanalysis climatology, and these are modified for the mid-twenty-first-century simulation using output from coupled GCMs. The twentieth-century simulation reproduces the observed climate well. In eastern Ethiopia and Somalia, the boreal spring rains that begin in May are cut short in the mid-twenty-first-century simulation. The cause is an anomalous dry, anticyclonic flow that develops over the Arabian Peninsula and the northern Arabian Sea as mass shifts eastward near 20°N in response to strong warming over the Sahara. In Tanzania and southern Kenya, the boreal spring's long rains are reduced throughout the season in the future simulation. This is a secondary response to precipitation enhancement in the Congo basin. The boreal fall ?short rains? season is lengthened in the twenty-first-century simulation in the southern Kenya and Tanzania region in association with a northeastward shift of the South Indian convergence zone.
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      Projected Changes in East African Rainy Seasons

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    http://yetl.yabesh.ir/yetl1/handle/yetl/4222439
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    contributor authorCook, Kerry H.
    contributor authorVizy, Edward K.
    date accessioned2017-06-09T17:07:02Z
    date available2017-06-09T17:07:02Z
    date copyright2013/08/01
    date issued2013
    identifier issn0894-8755
    identifier otherams-79637.pdf
    identifier urihttp://onlinelibrary.yabesh.ir/handle/yetl/4222439
    description abstractregional climate model with 90-km horizontal resolution on a large domain is used to predict and analyze precipitation changes over East Africa caused by greenhouse gas increases. A pair of six-member ensembles is used: one representing the late twentieth century and another the mid-twenty-first century under a midline emissions scenario. The twentieth-century simulation uses boundary conditions from reanalysis climatology, and these are modified for the mid-twenty-first-century simulation using output from coupled GCMs. The twentieth-century simulation reproduces the observed climate well. In eastern Ethiopia and Somalia, the boreal spring rains that begin in May are cut short in the mid-twenty-first-century simulation. The cause is an anomalous dry, anticyclonic flow that develops over the Arabian Peninsula and the northern Arabian Sea as mass shifts eastward near 20°N in response to strong warming over the Sahara. In Tanzania and southern Kenya, the boreal spring's long rains are reduced throughout the season in the future simulation. This is a secondary response to precipitation enhancement in the Congo basin. The boreal fall ?short rains? season is lengthened in the twenty-first-century simulation in the southern Kenya and Tanzania region in association with a northeastward shift of the South Indian convergence zone.
    publisherAmerican Meteorological Society
    titleProjected Changes in East African Rainy Seasons
    typeJournal Paper
    journal volume26
    journal issue16
    journal titleJournal of Climate
    identifier doi10.1175/JCLI-D-12-00455.1
    journal fristpage5931
    journal lastpage5948
    treeJournal of Climate:;2013:;volume( 026 ):;issue: 016
    contenttypeFulltext
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