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DOI10.1029/2018JD028623
The South Asian Monsoon Response to Remote Aerosols: Global and Regional Mechanisms
Shawki, D.1,2; Voulgarakis, A.1; Chakraborty, A.3,4; Kasoar, M.1,2; Srinivasan, J.3,4
2018-10-27
发表期刊JOURNAL OF GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH-ATMOSPHERES
ISSN2169-897X
EISSN2169-8996
出版年2018
卷号123期号:20页码:11585-11601
文章类型Article
语种英语
国家England; India
英文摘要

The South Asian summer monsoon has been suggested to be influenced by atmospheric aerosols, and this influence can be the result of either local or remote emissions. We have used the Hadley Centre Global Environment Model Version 3 (HadGEM3) coupled atmosphere-ocean climate model to investigate for the first time the centennial-scale South Asian precipitation response to emissions of sulfur dioxide (SO2), the dominant anthropogenic precursor of sulfate aerosol, from different midlatitude regions. Despite the localized nature of the regional heating that results from removing SO2 emissions, all experiments featured a similar large-scale precipitation response over South Asia, driven by ocean-modulated changes in the net cross-equatorial heat transport and an opposing cross-equatorial northward moisture transport. The effects are linearly additive, with the sum of the responses from the experiments where SO2 is removed from the United States, Europe, and East Asia resembling the response seen in the experiment where emissions are removed from the northern midlatitudes as a whole, but with East Asia being the largest contributor, even per unit of emission or top-of-atmosphere radiative forcing. This stems from the fact that East Asian emissions can more easily influence regional land-sea thermal contrasts and sea level pressure differences that drive the monsoon circulation, compared to emissions from more remote regions. Our results suggest that radiative effects of remote pollution should not be neglected when examining changes in South Asian climate and that and it is important to examine such effects in coupled ocean-atmosphere modeling frameworks.


Plain Language Summary Atmospheric aerosols have been shown to exert a strong influence on global and regional climate through their radiative effects. The South Asian summer monsoon, a climate phenomenon on which billions of lives depend, has been suggested to be influenced by aerosols, and this influence can be the result of either local or remote emissions. We have used a global climate model to investigate how sensitive is the monsoon to emissions from remote industrialized regions such as Europe, the North America, and East Asia. Despite the localized nature of the regional heating that results from removing emissions in these regions, all of them featured a similar large-scale rainfall change remotely over South Asia. This similarity reflects a common underlying mechanism, which involves a displacement of the tropical rain belt driven by aerosol effects on the temperature contrast between the two hemispheres of the Earth. We find that the effects of the different regions on South Asia are linearly additive, with East Asia being the largest contributor. This stems from the fact that its emissions can more easily influence regional land-sea thermal contrasts and sea level pressure differences over Asia that drive the summer monsoon circulation, compared to emissions from more remote regions. Our results suggest that influences of remote pollution should not be neglected when examining changes in South Asian climate and can help inform policy on the cobenefits and side effects of ongoing strategies that control regional air pollution in extratropical regions.


领域气候变化
收录类别SCI-E
WOS记录号WOS:000452000300019
WOS关键词SUMMER MONSOON ; OPTICAL DEPTH ; ANTHROPOGENIC AEROSOLS ; PRECIPITATION ; CLIMATE ; EMISSIONS ; IMPACTS ; SIMULATIONS ; TEMPERATURE ; VARIABILITY
WOS类目Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences
WOS研究方向Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences
引用统计
文献类型期刊论文
条目标识符http://119.78.100.173/C666/handle/2XK7JSWQ/33019
专题气候变化
作者单位1.Imperial Coll London, Dept Phys, London, England;
2.Imperial Coll London, Grantham Inst Climate Change & Environm, London, England;
3.Ctr Atmospher & Ocean Sci, IISc, Bangalore, Karnataka, India;
4.Divecha Ctr Climate Change, Bangalore, Karnataka, India
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GB/T 7714
Shawki, D.,Voulgarakis, A.,Chakraborty, A.,et al. The South Asian Monsoon Response to Remote Aerosols: Global and Regional Mechanisms[J]. JOURNAL OF GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH-ATMOSPHERES,2018,123(20):11585-11601.
APA Shawki, D.,Voulgarakis, A.,Chakraborty, A.,Kasoar, M.,&Srinivasan, J..(2018).The South Asian Monsoon Response to Remote Aerosols: Global and Regional Mechanisms.JOURNAL OF GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH-ATMOSPHERES,123(20),11585-11601.
MLA Shawki, D.,et al."The South Asian Monsoon Response to Remote Aerosols: Global and Regional Mechanisms".JOURNAL OF GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH-ATMOSPHERES 123.20(2018):11585-11601.
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