作者
Stefan Rahimi, Xiaohong Liu, Chenglai Wu, William K Lau, Hunter Brown, Mingxuan Wu, Yun Qian
发表日期
2019/9/26
期刊
Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics
卷号
19
期号
18
页码范围
12025-12049
出版商
Copernicus GmbH
简介
Black carbon (BC) and dust impart significant effects on the South Asian monsoon (SAM), which is responsible for   % of the region's annual precipitation. This study implements a variable-resolution (VR) version of the Community Earth System Model (CESM) to quantify two radiative effects of absorbing BC and dust on the SAM. Specifically, this study focuses on the snow darkening effect (SDE), as well as how these aerosols interact with incoming and outgoing radiation to facilitate an atmospheric response (i.e., aerosol–radiation interactions, ARIs). By running sensitivity experiments, the individual effects of SDE and ARI are quantified, and a theoretical framework is applied to assess these aerosols' impacts on the SAM. It is found that ARIs of absorbing aerosols warm the atmospheric column in a belt coincident with the May–June averaged location of the subtropical jet, bringing forth anomalous upper-tropospheric (lower-tropospheric) anticyclogenesis (cyclogenesis) and divergence (convergence). This anomalous arrangement in the mass fields brings forth enhanced rising vertical motion across South Asia and a stronger westerly low-level jet, the latter of which furnishes the Indian subcontinent with enhanced Arabian Gulf moisture. Precipitation increases of 2 mm d or more (a 60 % increase in June) result across much of northern India from May through August, with larger anomalies ( to  mm d) in the western Indian mountains and southern Tibetan Plateau (TP) mountain ranges due to orographic and anabatic enhancement. Across the Tibetan Plateau foothills, SDE by BC aerosols drives large precipitation anomalies of > …
引用总数
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