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Title: | Drying of Indian subcontinent by rapid Indian Ocean warming and a weakening land-sea thermal gradient |
Authors: | Roxy, Mathew Koll Ritika, Kapoor Terray, Pascal Murtugudde, Raghu Ashok, Karumuri GOSWAMI, B. N. Dept. of Earth and Climate Science |
Keywords: | Black Carbon Aerosols Summer Monsoon Climate-Change Asian Monsoon East-Asia El-Nino Circulation Variability Rainfall Trend 2015 |
Issue Date: | Jun-2015 |
Publisher: | Nature Publishing Group |
Citation: | Nature Communications, 6. |
Abstract: | There are large uncertainties looming over the status and fate of the South Asian summer monsoon, with several studies debating whether the monsoon is weakening or strengthening in a changing climate. Our analysis using multiple observed datasets demonstrates a significant weakening trend in summer rainfall during 1901–2012 over the central-east and northern regions of India, along the Ganges-Brahmaputra-Meghna basins and the Himalayan foothills, where agriculture is still largely rain-fed. Earlier studies have suggested an increase in moisture availability and land-sea thermal gradient in the tropics due to anthropogenic warming, favouring an increase in tropical rainfall. Here we show that the land-sea thermal gradient over South Asia has been decreasing, due to rapid warming in the Indian Ocean and a relatively subdued warming over the subcontinent. Using long-term observations and coupled model experiments, we provide compelling evidence that the enhanced Indian Ocean warming potentially weakens the land-sea thermal contrast, dampens the summer monsoon Hadley circulation, and thereby reduces the rainfall over parts of South Asia. |
URI: | http://dr.iiserpune.ac.in:8080/xmlui/handle/123456789/5279 https://doi.org/10.1038/ncomms8423 |
ISSN: | 2041-1723 |
Appears in Collections: | JOURNAL ARTICLES |
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