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Strengthening western equatorial Pacific and Maritime Continent atmospheric convection and its modulation on the trade wind during spring of 1901–2010
Author(s) -
Li Zhenning,
Yang Song,
Tam ChiYung,
Hu Chundi
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
international journal of climatology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.58
H-Index - 166
eISSN - 1097-0088
pISSN - 0899-8418
DOI - 10.1002/joc.6856
Subject(s) - climatology , environmental science , walker circulation , equator , forcing (mathematics) , convection , precipitation , cloud cover , boreal , atmospheric circulation , latitude , atmospheric sciences , sea surface temperature , geology , meteorology , geography , cloud computing , paleontology , geodesy , computer science , operating system
Changes in the tropical atmospheric overturning circulation can strongly influence the global weather pattern via affecting the location, extent, and strength of tropical convective heating. However, due to limitations in obtaining reliable global data before the satellite era, there are still uncertainties on long‐term changes in the tropical overturning features, such as the Walker Circulation. By analysing the 20th century reanalysis products, ship‐based observations and gauge‐based land precipitation data, robust intensification of convection is found over the western equatorial Pacific and Maritime Continent (WEP‐MC; 90°E–150°E/15°S–15°N), where rainfall and total cloud cover increased by 15–20% in boreal spring during 1901–2010. The signal is noticeably seasonally dependent, and both rainfall and cloud cover show consistent and significant increasing trends only in the boreal spring season. General circulation model (GCM) experiments were conducted using two different reconstructed SST data sets as forcing; results from both runs indicate springtime intensification of WEP‐MC convection, even with relatively uniform SST warming. Further, numerical experiments using a simplified model show that the Pacific trade wind can be accelerated by intensifying cumulus heating; however, this can be sensitive to the location of convection, and only occurs if the latter is within ±5° in latitude along the equator. Our findings suggest that the secular change in the Walker Circulation is potentially discovered from the current reanalysis and observational data sets if “regional‐up” approaches are applied.

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