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contributor authorAnnamalai, H.;Taguchi, Bunmei;McCreary, Julian P.;Nagura, Motoki;Miyama, Toru
date accessioned2018-01-03T11:00:56Z
date available2018-01-03T11:00:56Z
date copyright7/27/2017 12:00:00 AM
date issued2017
identifier otherjcli-d-16-0573.1.pdf
identifier urihttp://138.201.223.254:8080/yetl1/handle/yetl/4246059
description abstractAbstractForecasting monsoon rainfall using dynamical climate models has met with little success, partly due to models? inability to represent the monsoon climatological state accurately. In this article the nature and dynamical causes of their biases are investigated. The approach is to analyze errors in multimodel-mean climatological fields determined from CMIP5, and to carry out sensitivity experiments using a coupled model [the Coupled Model for the Earth Simulator (CFES)] that does represent the monsoon realistically. Precipitation errors in the CMIP5 models persist throughout the annual cycle, with positive (negative) errors occurring over the near-equatorial western Indian Ocean (South Asia). Model errors indicate that an easterly wind stress bias ?τ along the equator begins during April?May and peaks during November; the severity of the ?τ is that the Wyrtki jets, eastward-flowing equatorial currents during the intermonsoon seasons (April?May and October?November), are almost eliminated. An erroneous east?west SST gradient (warm west and cold east) develops in June. The structure of the model errors indicates that they arise from Bjerknes feedback in the equatorial Indian Ocean (EIO). Vertically integrated moisture and moist static energy budgets confirm that warm SST bias in the western EIO anchors moist processes that cause the positive precipitation bias there. In CFES sensitivity experiments in which ?τ or warm SST bias over the western EIO is artificially introduced, errors in the EIO are similar to those in the CMIP5 models; moreover, precipitation over South Asia is reduced. An overall implication of these results is that South Asian rainfall errors in CMIP5 models are linked to errors of coupled processes in the western EIO, and in coupled models correct representation of EIO coupled processes (Bjerknes feedback) is a necessary condition for realistic monsoon simulation.
publisherAmerican Meteorological Society
titleSystematic Errors in South Asian Monsoon Simulation: Importance of Equatorial Indian Ocean Processes
typeJournal Paper
journal volume30
journal issue20
journal titleJournal of Climate
identifier doi10.1175/JCLI-D-16-0573.1
journal fristpage8159
journal lastpage8178
treeJournal of Climate:;2017:;volume( 030 ):;issue: 020
contenttypeFulltext


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