Rain‐Induced Surface Sensible Heat Flux Reduces Monsoonal Rainfall Over India

Author:

Zhou Xin1,Ray Pallav1ORCID,Tan Haochen2ORCID,Dudhia Jimy3ORCID,Ajayamohan R. S.4ORCID,Gomes Helber5ORCID,Pan Yipeng6

Affiliation:

1. Florida Institute of Technology Melbourne FL USA

2. Argonne National Laboratory Chicago IL USA

3. National Center for Atmospheric Research Boulder CO USA

4. Department of Meteorology Abu Dhabi Polytechnique Abu Dhabi United Arab Emirates

5. Institute of Atmospheric Science Federal University of Alagoas Maceio Brazil

6. Nanjing University of Information Science and Technology Nanjing China

Abstract

AbstractPrecipitation can induce a surface sensible heat flux since the raindrops are generally cooler than the surface. This precipitation‐induced sensible heat flux (QP) is typically ignored in models. However, during heavy rainfall, QP can be large and may not be negligible such as over India during the summer monsoon season. We provide the first results of incorporating QP in a simulation that shows ∼2% (∼5%) reduction in precipitation over India compared to the simulation without QP during a monsoonal active phase in 2017 (2018). This reduction was primarily due to a reduction in vertical advection of moisture. Additionally, QP modified the spatial distribution of precipitation with 40% of the geographical area encountering alterations of at least 20% in precipitation. This change in precipitation distribution across the region can have important implications for regional agriculture and irrigation practices. Changes in the partitioning of surface heat flux components due to QP is also discussed.

Funder

Climate Program Office

National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration

Computational and Information Systems Laboratory

National Science Foundation

National Center for Atmospheric Research

Publisher

American Geophysical Union (AGU)

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