Litcius/Paper detail

Indian monsoon derailed by a North Atlantic wavetrain

Parashmoni Borah, V. Venugopal, Jai Sukhatme, P. Muddebihal, B. N. Goswami

2020Science96 citationsDOI

Abstract

The forecast of Indian monsoon droughts has been predicated on the notion of a season-long rainfall deficit linked to a warm equatorial Pacific. Here we show that nearly half of all droughts over the past century differ from this paradigm in that they (i) occur when Pacific temperatures are near-neutral and (ii) are subseasonal phenomena, characterized by an abrupt decline in late-season rainfall. This severe subseasonal rainfall deficit can be associated with a Rossby wave from mid-latitudes. Specifically, we find that the interaction of upper-level winds with an episodic North Atlantic vorticity anomaly results in a wavetrain that curves toward East Asia, disrupting the monsoon. This atmospheric teleconnection offers an avenue for improved predictability of droughts, especially in the absence of telltale signatures in the Pacific.

Topics & Concepts

OceanographyMonsoonClimatologyEnvironmental scienceGeologyGeographyTropical and Extratropical Cyclones ResearchClimate variability and modelsOcean Waves and Remote Sensing