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contributor authorDixit, Vishal
contributor authorSherwood, Steven
contributor authorGeoffroy, Olivier
contributor authorMantsis, Damianos
date accessioned2019-09-19T10:08:43Z
date available2019-09-19T10:08:43Z
date copyright10/13/2017 12:00:00 AM
date issued2017
identifier otherjcli-d-17-0234.1.pdf
identifier urihttp://yetl.yabesh.ir/yetl1/handle/yetl/4262043
description abstractAbstractPaleoclimatic proxies indicate that significant summertime rainfall reached the Sahara region during the mid-Holocene, presumably in response to stronger summertime heating in the Northern Hemisphere. Climate models generally do not replicate the enhanced precipitation. As a step toward understanding the response and possible role of model errors, a series of idealized experiments were conducted with the Community Earth System Model in which local atmospheric heat sources of increasing magnitude were applied in the boundary layer over the Sahel and Sahara. In response to this local heating, the cold and moist southwesterly monsoon inflow encroaches farther northward. A source strength of roughly 1 K day?1 produces responses similar to those in a simulation with mid-Holocene orbital forcing imposed globally, while that of 1.5 K day?1 produces a precipitation response similar to that from paleoproxies. The precipitation increases nonlinearly, with a jump at heating of around 1 K day?1, even though the low-level monsoon inflow increases linearly. Competition at low-to-middle levels between drying by a shallow return flow just above the boundary layer and moistening by vertical advection within the layer affects convection and determines the northward extension of precipitation. When the heating becomes 1.5 K day?1, the boundary layer flow encroaches sufficiently northward to weaken the shallow return flow, further aiding precipitation. This novel nonlinear mechanism operates without biogeophysical feedbacks, and suggests that poor representation of the local thermodynamic processes may hamper a model?s ability to simulate dynamical feedbacks and hence the strength and poleward extension of monsoon rains under forcings like those during the mid-Holocene.
publisherAmerican Meteorological Society
titleThe Role of Nonlinear Drying above the Boundary Layer in the Mid-Holocene African Monsoon
typeJournal Paper
journal volume31
journal issue1
journal titleJournal of Climate
identifier doi10.1175/JCLI-D-17-0234.1
journal fristpage233
journal lastpage249
treeJournal of Climate:;2017:;volume 031:;issue 001
contenttypeFulltext


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