Role of the Cold Okhotsk Sea on the Climate of the North Pacific Subtropical High and Baiu Precipitation

Author:

Kawasaki Kenta1,Tachibana Yoshihiro1,Nakamura Tetsu2,Yamazaki Koji3

Affiliation:

1. a Weather and Climate Dynamics Laboratory, Mie University, Mie, Japan

2. b Faculty of Environmental Earth Science, Hokkaido University, Hokkaido, Japan

3. c Arctic Research Center, Hokkaido University, Hokkaido, Japan

Abstract

AbstractSummertime temperatures in marginal seas are, in general, colder than on the surrounding continent because of the large contrast in heat capacity between the land and the ocean. The Okhotsk Sea, which is covered by sea ice until early summer, is much colder than the surrounding continent in summer. The Okhotsk Sea is thus located in an area with one of the largest temperature contrasts of all the marginal seas in summertime midlatitudes. Cooled air over the Okhotsk Sea may have an impact on remote summer climates, such as by serving as the source of cold-air advection that results in a poor crop harvest in Japan. Here, we examine the role of the Okhotsk Sea on the early summer climate of the western part of the North Pacific through an ideal numerical experiment by artificially changing the model’s default oceanic condition in the Okhotsk Sea to a condition of land cover. Simulation results reveal that the presence of the Okhotsk Sea increases precipitation of the baiu/mei-yu front through strengthening of the northward moisture flux at the western edge of an intensified North Pacific subtropical high. The Okhotsk influence farther extends toward western North America to which the strengthened jet stream with a storm track extends. This remote influence is achievable through feedback from a transient eddy anomaly that is activated by the surface temperature gradient between the cold Okhotsk Sea and the warm Pacific Ocean. The findings imply that the existence of the Okhotsk Sea strengthens the East Asian summer monsoons.

Funder

Ministory of Education

ArCS

BElmont Forum InterDec

Publisher

American Meteorological Society

Subject

Atmospheric Science

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