Interdecadal change of the controlling mechanisms for East Asian early summer rainfall variation around the mid-1990s SCIE SCOPUS

Cited 44 time in WEB OF SCIENCE Cited 48 time in Scopus
Title
Interdecadal change of the controlling mechanisms for East Asian early summer rainfall variation around the mid-1990s
Author(s)
Yim, So-Young; Wang, Bin; Kwon, MinHo
KIOST Author(s)
Kwon, Min Ho(권민호)
Alternative Author(s)
권민호
Publication Year
2014-03
Abstract
East Asian (EA) summer monsoon shows considerable differences in the mean state and principal modes of interannual variation between early summer (May-June, MJ) and late summer (July-August, JA). The present study focuses on the early summer (MJ) precipitation variability. We find that the interannual variation of the MJ precipitation and the processes controlling the variation have been changed abruptly around the mid-1990s. The rainfall anomaly represented by the leading empirical orthogonal function has changed from a dipole-like pattern in pre-95 epoch (1979-1994) to a tripole-like pattern in post-95 epoch (1995-2010); the prevailing period of the corresponding principal component has also changed from 3-5 to 2-3 years. These changes are concurrent with the changes of the corresponding El Nino-Southern Oscillation (ENSO) evolutions. During the pre-95 epoch, the MJ EA rainfall anomaly is coupled to a slow decay of canonical ENSO events signified by an eastern Pacific warming, which induces a dipole rainfall feature over EA. On the other hand, during the post-95 epoch the anomalous MJ EA rainfall is significantly linked to a rapid decay of a central Pacific warming and a distinct tripolar sea surface temperature (SST) in North Atlantic. The central Pacific warming-induced Philippine Sea anticyclone induces an increased rainfall in southern China and decreased rainfall in central eastern China. The North Atlantic Oscillation-related tripolar North Atlantic SST anomaly induces a wave train that is responsible for the increase northern EA rainfall. Those two impacts form the tripole-like rainfall pattern over EA. Understanding such changes is important for improving seasonal to decadal predictions and long-term climate change in EA.
ISSN
0930-7575
URI
https://sciwatch.kiost.ac.kr/handle/2020.kiost/2853
DOI
10.1007/s00382-013-1760-6
Bibliographic Citation
CLIMATE DYNAMICS, v.42, no.5-6, pp.1325 - 1333, 2014
Publisher
SPRINGER
Subject
SURFACE-TEMPERATURE; ATLANTIC-OCEAN; EL-NINO; MONSOON; ENSO; PRECIPITATION; VARIABILITY; MODES
Keywords
East Asian summer monsoon; El Nino-Southern Oscillation (ENSO); North Atlantic Oscillation (NAO); Philippine Sea anticyclone; Prediction
Type
Article
Language
English
Document Type
Article
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