Abstract:
The Indian summer monsoon (ISM) exhibits considerable variance in the multi-decadal
timescales in observational and paleoclimate proxy records. The summer-mean all-India
rainfall exhibits multidecadal fluctuations remaining periodically above the long-term mean
for several decades followed by periods when it is below the long-term mean. The multidecadal
variance of monsoon is generally attributed to the multidecadal variability over the Atlantic -
the Atlantic multi-decadal Oscillation (AMO). Though a robust relationship between the two
is observed in the instrumental records, with the limited span of observational records we can
capture only two cycles of AMO and the AMO-ISM relationship is inconsistent among the
paleoclimate proxy records. While several hypotheses have been put forth to explain the
observed relationship, several questions remain with respect to the robustness of the AMO-
ISM relationship and the teleconnection pathways. In this thesis, I revisit the AMO-ISM
relationship and try to understand the underlying large-scale atmospheric teleconnection
processes which connect these climate modes. A combination of observational and hierarchical
modelling approaches using intermediate complexity models and long simulations from state-
of-the-art global climate models (GCM) were used to infer the observed AMO-ISM
relationship.
The first question addressed is understanding how well the proposed modes of AMO-
ISM teleconnection are represented in current generation GCM simulations. Last millennium
simulations from the Climate Model Intercomparison Project/Paleoclimate Model
Intercomparison Project (CMIP5/PMIP3) were analyzed to examine two broad atmospheric
teleconnection mechanisms which connect the Atlantic and the ISM. AMO-induced Pacific
Ocean variability and associated changes in Walker circulation are found to be robust in
different model simulations. However, the models are found to exhibit considerable disagreement in the upper-tropospheric planetary wave response to AMO and the associated
impact it can have on the ISM. The study highlights the strength and deficiencies of current
climate models in simulating the teleconnection processes which control the decadal and
longer-term variability of monsoon and is of great value as these models are also used for future
climate projections.
The second question addressed is how the planetary wave responses to AMO modulates
the ISM. SST anomalies over the extratropical North Atlantic can drive vortices with
equivalent barotropic vertical structures. Idealized model experiments indeed show that
equivalent barotropic Rossby wave response across the Euro-Atlantic sector can reach west
central Asia (WCA). Upper-level circulation anomalies associated with the Rossby waves over
WCA impact ISM through anomalous tropospheric temperature and easterly shear. The study
demonstrates significant modulation of WCA anomalies by the AMO in the multi-decadal time
scale. It is also found that the observed out-of-phase relationship between AMO and ISM in
the recent decades, may be attributed to the anomalous equivalent barotropic responses to the
relatively stronger high latitude warming over the North Atlantic during the recent AMO warm
phase which altered the entire downstream teleconnection pattern producing cyclonic
anomalies over WCA and in turn weaken the ISM.
The third central question addressed is the relative roles of the equatorial and
extratropical North Pacific in the observed AMO-ISM relationship. Simple model experiments
with an intermediate complexity GCM highlight the vital role played by the Pacific Ocean in
the AMO-ISM relationship, in agreement with the more comprehensive GCM simulations. In
response to the warm North Atlantic, the equatorial Pacific is found to constrain the Walker
circulation resulting in enhanced low-level convergence over India. The North Pacific
contribution is found to be weak during summer. Analysis of observational records shows a strong lagged AMO-ISM relationship consistent with the development of a strong meridional
gradient in SST over the Pacific Ocean. Further sensitivity experiments are carried out with
prescribed forcing confined over tropical and extratropical North Atlantic. Results suggest
tropical North Atlantic is the critical driver of the lagged response.