Literature DB >> 31709032

Competing influences of greenhouse warming and aerosols on Asian Summer Monsoon circulation and rainfall.

William K M Lau1,2, Kyu-Myong Kim3.   

Abstract

In this paper, we have compared and contrasted competing and amplifying influences on the global and regional drivers, circulation and rainfall responses of the Asian monsoon under global greenhouse warming (GHG) and aerosol forcing, based on CMIP5 historical simulations. Under GHG-only forcing, the land warms much faster than the ocean, magnifying the pre-industrial climatological land-ocean thermal contrast and hemispheric asymmetry, i.e., warmer northern than southern hemisphere. A steady increasing warm-ocean-warmer-land (WOWL) trend has been in effect since the 1950's substantially increasing moisture transport from adjacent oceans, and enhancing rainfall over the Asian monsoon regions. However, under GHG warming, increased atmospheric stability due to strong reduction in mid-tropospheric and near surface relative humidity coupled to an expanding subsidence areas, associated with the Deep Tropical Squeeze (DTS, Lau and Kim, 2015b) strongly suppress monsoon convection and rainfall over subtropical and extratropical land, leading to a weakening of the Asian monsoon meridional circulation. The inclusion of aerosol emissions strongly masks WOWL, by over 60% over the northern hemisphere, negating to a large extent the rainfall increase due to GHG warming, and leading to a further weakening of the monsoon circulation, through increasing atmospheric stability, most likely associated with aerosol solar dimming and semi-direct effects. Overall, we find that GHG exerts stronger positive rainfall sensitivity, but less negative circulation sensitivity in SASM compared to EASM. In contrast, aerosols exert stronger negative impacts on rainfall, but less negative impacts on circulation in EASM compared to SASM.

Year:  2017        PMID: 31709032      PMCID: PMC6839711          DOI: 10.1007/s13143-017-0033-4

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Asia Pac J Atmos Sci        ISSN: 1976-7633            Impact factor:   2.100


  9 in total

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3.  Anthropogenic aerosols and the weakening of the South Asian summer monsoon.

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Journal:  Science       Date:  2011-09-29       Impact factor: 47.728

4.  Microphysical effects determine macrophysical response for aerosol impacts on deep convective clouds.

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Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A       Date:  2013-11-11       Impact factor: 11.205

5.  Flood or drought: how do aerosols affect precipitation?

Authors:  Daniel Rosenfeld; Ulrike Lohmann; Graciela B Raga; Colin D O'Dowd; Markku Kulmala; Sandro Fuzzi; Anni Reissell; Meinrat O Andreae
Journal:  Science       Date:  2008-09-05       Impact factor: 47.728

6.  Drying of Indian subcontinent by rapid Indian Ocean warming and a weakening land-sea thermal gradient.

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7.  Identifying human influences on atmospheric temperature.

Authors:  Benjamin D Santer; Jeffrey F Painter; Carl A Mears; Charles Doutriaux; Peter Caldwell; Julie M Arblaster; Philip J Cameron-Smith; Nathan P Gillett; Peter J Gleckler; John Lanzante; Judith Perlwitz; Susan Solomon; Peter A Stott; Karl E Taylor; Laurent Terray; Peter W Thorne; Michael F Wehner; Frank J Wentz; Tom M L Wigley; Laura J Wilcox; Cheng-Zhi Zou
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Authors:  Bin Wang; Jian Liu; Hyung-Jin Kim; Peter J Webster; So-Young Yim; Baoqiang Xiang
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9.  Robust Hadley Circulation changes and increasing global dryness due to CO2 warming from CMIP5 model projections.

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  9 in total
  2 in total

1.  Changing circulation structure and precipitation characteristics in Asian monsoon regions: greenhouse warming vs. aerosol effects.

Authors:  William K M Lau; Kyu-Myong Kim; L Ruby Leung
Journal:  Geosci Lett       Date:  2017-11-28

2.  Impact of snow-darkening by deposition of light-absorbing aerosols on snow cover in the Himalaya-Tibetan-Plateau and influence on the Asian Summer monsoon: A possible mechanism for the Blanford Hypothesis.

Authors:  William K M Lau; Kyu-Myong Kim
Journal:  Atmosphere (Basel)       Date:  2018-11-12       Impact factor: 2.686

  2 in total

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