The American Monsoon Systems
Mechoso
Carlos R.
author
Robertson
Andrew W.
author
Columbia University. International Research Institute for Climate and Society
Ropelewski
Chester F.
author
Columbia University. Earth Institute
Grimm
Alice M.
author
Columbia University. International Research Institute for Climate and Society
originator
text
Articles
2005
manuscript version
English
This paper examines similarities and differences among major features of the North and South American monsoon systems. Over both North and South America the summertime circulation shows upper-level anticyclone/low-level heat low structures. These develop at different distances from the equator. It is argued that ascent to the east where convective and subtropical convergence zones develop, and subsidence over the cool waters of the eastern Pacific where stratocumulus decks provide a radiative heat sink to the tropical atmosphere are integral and unifying aspects of both monsoon systems. The intraseasonal and interannual variability of the systems are contrasted. The reported links between anomalies in soil conditions and sea surface temperatures are marginal, and consistently long-range predictability is low. Ropelewski et al. (2004) and Grimm et al. (2004) focus on each of the American monsoon systems in companion papers.
Atmospheric sciences
Meteorology
The Global monsoon system : research and forecast : report of the International Committee of the Third International Workshop on Monsoons (IWM-III) 2-6 November 2004, Hangzhou, China
Chang
Chih-Pei
editor
Wang
Bin
editor
Lau
Ngar-Cheung
editor
Geneva
World Meteorological Organization
2005
197
206
WMO/TD
1266
http://hdl.handle.net/10022/AC:P:14471
NNC
NNC
2012-08-21 13:44:28 -0400
2012-08-21 14:11:49 -0400
8491
eng