Investigating the impact of land surface characteristics on monsoon
dynamics with idealized model simulations and theories
Abstract
Monsoons emerge over a range of land surface conditions and exhibit
varying physical characteristics over the seasonal cycle, from onset to
withdrawal. Systematically varying the moisture and albedo parameters
over land in an idealized modeling framework allows one to analyze the
physics underlying the successive stages of monsoon development. To this
end we implement an isolated South American continent with reduced heat
capacity but no topography in an idealized moist general circulation
model. Irrespective of the local moisture availability, the seasonal
cycles of precipitation and circulation over the South American monsoon
sector are distinctly monsoonal with the default surface albedo. The dry
land case (zero evaporation) is characterized by a shallow overturning
circulation with vigorous lower-tropospheric ascent, transporting water
vapor from the ocean. By contrast, with bucket hydrology or unlimited
land moisture the monsoon features deep moist convection that penetrates
the upper troposphere. A series of land albedo perturbation experiments
indicates that the monsoon strengthens with the net column energy flux
and the near-surface moist static energy with all land moisture
conditions. When the land-ocean thermal contrast is strong enough,
inertial instability alone is sufficient for producing a shallow but
vigorous circulation and converging a large amount of moisture from the
ocean even in the absence of land moisture. Once the land is
sufficiently moist, convective instability takes hold and the shallow
circulation deepens. These results have implications for monsoon onset
and intensification, and may elucidate the seasonal variations in how
surface warming impacts tropical precipitation over land.