Bay of Bengal Intraseasonal Oscillations and the 2018 Monsoon Onset
January 1, 2021·,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,·
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Emily Shroyer
Amit Tandon
Debasis Sengupta
Harindra J. S. Fernando
Andrew J. Lucas
J. Thomas Farrar
Rajib Chattopadhyay
Simon de Szoeke
Maria Flatau
Adam Rydbeck
Hemantha Wijesekera
Michael McPhaden
Hyodae Seo
Aneesh Subramanian
R. Venkatesan
Jossia Joseph
S. Ramsundaram
Arnold L. Gordon
Shannon M. Bohman
Jaynise Perez
Iury T. Simoes-Sousa
Steven R. Jayne
Robert E. Todd
G. S. Bhat
Matthias Lankhorst
Tamara Schlosser
Katherine Adams
S. U. P. Jinadasa
Manikandan Mathur
M. Mohapatra
E. Pattabhi Rama Rao
A. K. Sahai
Rashmi Sharma
Craig Lee
Luc Rainville
Deepak Cherian
Kerstin Cullen
Luca R. Centurioni
Verena Hormann
Jennifer MacKinnon
Uwe Send
Arachaporn Anutaliya
Amy Waterhouse
Garrett S. Black
Jeremy A. Dehart
Kaitlyn M. Woods
Edward Creegan
Gad Levy
Lakshmi H. Kantha
Bulusu Subrahmanyam
Abstract
In the Bay of Bengal, the warm, dry boreal spring concludes with the onset of the summer monsoon and accompanying southwesterly winds, heavy rains, and variable air-sea fluxes. Here, we summarize the 2018 monsoon onset using observations collected through the multinational Monsoon Intraseasonal Oscillations in the Bay of Bengal (MISO-BoB) program between the United States, India, and Sri Lanka. MISO-BoB aims to improve understanding of monsoon intraseasonal variability, and the 2018 field effort captured the coupled air-sea response during a transition from active-to-break conditions in the central BoB. The active phase of the similar to 20-day research cruise was characterized by warm sea surface temperature (SST > 30 degrees C), cold atmospheric outflows with intermittent heavy rainfall, and increasing winds (from 2 to 15 m s(-1)). Accumulated rainfall exceeded 200 mm with 90% of precipitation occurring during the first week. The following break period was both dry and clear, with persistent 10-12 m s(-1) wind and evaporation of 0.2 mm h(-1). The evolving environmental state included a deepening ocean mixed layer (from similar to 20 to 50 m), cooling SST (by similar to 1 degrees C), and warming/drying of the lower to midtroposphere. Local atmospheric development was consistent with phasing of the large-scale intraseasonal oscillation. The upper ocean stores significant heat in the BoB, enough to maintain SST above 29 degrees C despite cooling by surface fluxes and ocean mixing. Comparison with reanalysis indicates biases in air-sea fluxes, which may be related to overly cool prescribed SST. Resolution of such biases offers a path toward improved forecasting of transition periods in the monsoon.
Type
Publication
BULLETIN OF THE AMERICAN METEOROLOGICAL SOCIETY
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