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Interdecadal Variations of Meridional Winds in the South China Sea and Their Relationship with Summer Climate in China*

Authors :
Chunhui Li
Tim Li
Ailan Lin
Dejun Gu
Jianyin Liang
Bin Zheng
Source :
Journal of Climate. 23:825-841
Publication Year :
2010
Publisher :
American Meteorological Society, 2010.

Abstract

Analysis of the NCEP and 40-yr ECMWF Re-Analysis (ERA-40) data and the Xisha Island station observation indicates that the low-level meridional wind (LLMW) over the South China Sea (SCS) experienced an interdecadal variation since the late 1970s. The LLMW change is associated with the reduction of tropospheric temperature in midlatitude East Asia. A mechanism is put forward to explain the triggering and maintenance of the tropospheric cooling. The enhanced convective heating over the southern South China Sea results in a meridional vertical overturning circulation, with anomalous descending motion appearing over continental East Asia. The anomalous descending motion reduces the local humidity through both anomalous low-level divergence and dry vertical advection. The decrease of the local tropospheric humidity leads to the enhanced outgoing longwave radiation into space and thus cold temperature anomalies. The decrease of the temperature and thickness leads to anomalous low (high) pressure and convergent (divergent) flows at upper (lower) levels. This further enhances the descending motion and leads to a positive feedback loop. The fall in tropospheric temperature over continental East Asia reduces the land–sea thermal contrast and leads to the weakening of cross-equatorial flows and the LLMW over SCS. A further diagnosis indicates that the LLMW is closely linked to the summer precipitation and temperature variations in China on interdecadal time scales. A weakening of the LLMW after 1976 is associated with a “−, +, −” meridional rainfall pattern, with less rain in Guangdong Province and north China but more rain in the Yangtze and Huaihe River basins and northeast China, and a “+, −, +” temperature pattern, with increased (decreased) surface temperature in the south and north (central) China.

Details

ISSN :
15200442 and 08948755
Volume :
23
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of Climate
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........70efbb7c90cd56534b6a5cc827341b74