Figure 1 - (IPCC AR5: Chapter 12) |
With regards to the South Asian monsoon, the tropical Indian Ocean SSTs (sea surface temperature) are projected to rise and the temperature of the land to rise further still (aided by the shear amount of land in the northern hemisphere), creating a larger temperature gradient. This leads to increased evaporation and enhanced moisture flux from the ocean to the land, increasing precipitation (Liepert and Previdi, 2012) despite the circulation of the South Asian monsoon weakening. Chung and Ramanathan (2006) have linked this weakening to a trend whereby the SSTs of the equatorial Indian Ocean have warmed but those of the northern Indian Ocean have not. This is evidenced with reduction in the meridional SST gradient, causing the monsoon circulation to weaken, and leading to a re-distribution of rainfall within the South Asian monsoon. Figure 2 from the IPCC report summarises what is going on rather nicely and makes linkages between factors more visible.
Figure 2 - (a) and (b) are fairly self explanatory but (c) is the water vapour flux convergence in the lower troposphere and (d) is the convergence of winds in the lower troposphere. RCP 2.6 = dark blue line, RCP 4.5 = light blue line, RCP 6.0 = orange line and RCP 8.5 = red line (IPCC AR5: Chapter 14). |
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