Monsoon Planet: Bimodal Rainfall Distribution due to Barrier Structure in Pressure Fields

Author:

Katzenberger Anja12ORCID,Petri Stefan1ORCID,Feulner Georg12ORCID,Levermann Anders123ORCID

Affiliation:

1. a Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research, Member of the Leibniz Association, Potsdam, Germany

2. b Institute of Physics and Astronomy, Potsdam University, Potsdam, Germany

3. c Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory, Columbia University, New York, New York

Abstract

Abstract Monsoon systems transport water and energy across the globe, making them a central component of the global circulation system. Changes in different forcing parameters have the potential to fundamentally change the monsoon characteristics as indicated in various paleoclimatic records. Here, we use the Atmosphere Model developed at the Geophysical Fluid Dynamics Laboratory (GFDL-AM2) and couple it with a slab ocean in order to analyze the monsoon’s sensitivity to changes in different parameters on a planet with idealized topography (varying land position, slab depth, atmospheric CO2 concentration, solar radiation, sulfate aerosol concentration, and surface albedo). This Monsoon Planet concept of an aquaplanet with a broad zonal land stripe allows us to reduce the influence of topography and to access the relevant meridional monsoon dynamics. In simulations with monsoon dynamics, a bimodal rainfall distribution develops during the monsoon months with one maximum over the tropical ocean and the other one over land. The intensity and extent of the monsoon depend on the relative height of a local maximum in the surface pressure field that is acting as a barrier and is determining the coastward moisture transport. Changes in the barrier height occur during the course of one year but can also be induced when varying different parameters in the sensitivity analysis (e.g., the increase of atmospheric CO2 reduces the barrier height, resulting in an increase of rainfall, while aerosols have the opposing effect). This bimodal rainfall structure separated by a pressure barrier is also present in reanalysis data of the West African monsoon. Significance Statement Monsoon rainfall directly impacts the livelihood of millions of individuals in the tropics. Because monsoons transport energy and water around the globe, their influence reaches far beyond the tropics, and changes in their dynamics affect the climate both locally and globally. The individual monsoon systems are subject to various forcing factors that determine the monsoon characteristics in partly opposing ways. Here, we implement a model setup of the Monsoon Planet to study the monsoon’s sensitivity to various forcings in a simplified design, allowing us to gain new insights into monsoon dynamics. We find that a local maximum in the pressure field is acting as a barrier for moisture transport and thus determines the monsoon characteristics over land.

Funder

Heinrich Böll Stiftung

Government of the Federal Republic of Germany

Publisher

American Meteorological Society

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