Role of atmospheric heating over the South China Sea and western Pacific regions in modulating Asian summer climate under the global warming background

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Abstract

The response of monsoon precipitation to global warming, which is one of the most significant climate change signals at the earth’s surface, exhibits very distinct regional features, especially over the South China Sea (SCS) and adjacent regions in boreal summer. To understand the possible atmospheric dynamics in these specific regions under the global warming background, changes in atmospheric heating and their possible influences on Asian summer climate are investigated by both observational diagnosis and numerical simulations. Results indicate that heating in the middle troposphere has intensified in the SCS and western Pacific regions in boreal summer, accompanied by increased precipitation, cloud cover, and lower-tropospheric convergence and decreased sea level pressure. Sensitivity experiments show that middle and upper tropospheric heating causes an east–west feedback pattern between SCS and western Pacific and continental South Asia, which strengthens the South Asian High in the upper troposphere and moist convergence in the lower troposphere, consequently forcing a descending motion and adiabatic warming over continental South Asia. When air–sea interaction is considered, the simulation results are overall more similar to observations, and in particular the bias of precipitation over the Indian Ocean simulated by AGCMs has been reduced. The result highlights the important role of air–sea interaction in understanding the changes in Asian climate.

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He, B., Yang, S., & Li, Z. (2016). Role of atmospheric heating over the South China Sea and western Pacific regions in modulating Asian summer climate under the global warming background. Climate Dynamics, 46(9–10), 2897–2908. https://doi.org/10.1007/s00382-015-2739-2

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