Goswami, B. N., 1998: Interannual variations of
Indian summer monsoon in a GCM: External conditions versus internal feedbacks.
Journal of Climate, 11(4), 501-522.
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| Abstract: The potential predictability of the Indian summer
monsoon due to slowly varying sea surface temperature (SST) forcing is
examined. Factors responsible for limiting the predictability are also
investigated. Three multiyear simulations with the R30 version of the Geophysical
Fluid Dynamics Laboratory's climate model are carried out for this purpose.
The mean monsoon simulated by this model is realistic including the mean
summer precipitation over the Indian continent. The interannual variability
of the large-scale component of the monsoon such as the "monsoon shear
index" and its teleconnection with Pacific SST is well simulated by
the model in a 15-yr. integration with observed SST as boundary condition.
On regional scales, the skill in simulating the interannual variability
of precipitation over the Indian continent by the model is rather modest
and its simultaneous correlation with eastern Pacific SST is negative but
poor as observed. The poor predictability of precipitation over the Indian
region in the model is related to the fact that contribution to the interannual
variability over this region due to slow SST variations [El Niño-Southern
Oscillation (ENSO) related] is comparable to those due to regional-scale
fluctuations unrelated to ENSO SST. The physical mechanism through which
ENSO SST tend to produce reduction in precipitation over the Indian continent
is also elucidated. |
| A measure of internal variability of the model summer monsoon is obtained
from a 20-yr. integration of the same model with fixed annual cycle SST
as boundary conditions but with predicted soil moisture and snow cover.
A comparison of summer monsoon indexes between this run and the observed
SST run shows that the internal oscillations can account for a large fraction
of the simulated monsoon variability. The regional-scale oscillations in
the observed SST run seems to arise from these internal oscillations. It
is discovered that most of the interannual internal variability is due
to an internal quasi-biennial oscillation (QBO) of the model atmosphere.
Such a QBO is also found in the author's third 18-yr. simulation in which
fixed annual cycle of SST as well as soil moisture and snow cover are prescribed.
This shows that the model QBO is not due to land-surface-atmosphere interaction.
It is proposed that the model QBO arises due to an interaction between
nonlinear intraseasonal oscillations and the annual cycle. Spatial structure
of the QBO and its role in limiting the predictability of the Indian summer
monsoon is discussed. |