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ResultsSelected Results The movement of
Meteosat-5 over India starting in 1998 in support of the Indian Ocean
Experiment (INDOEX) provides a unique opportunity to study in detail the
daytime diurnal variability of clouds and components of the radiation
budget over that region (Wonsick et al., 2009). Documented is the seasonal
progression of the Asian monsoon as seen in clouds and convection in the
pre-, peak-, and post-monsoon seasons. Diurnal variation of frequency
of occurrence of low clouds (left column) and high clouds (right column)
for pre-monsoon (Mar - May; top row), peak-monsoon (Jun - Sep; middle
row), and post-monsoon (Oct - Nov; bottom row) seasons of 2001 for hours
between 8 - 15 LST is shown in Figure 1; monthly
mean cloud amount (%) is given in Figure 2;
frequency of occurrence of convective clouds at selected daytime hours
for the peak-monsoon season (Jun - Sep) 2001 is shown in Figure
3; cloud amount in % (top) and type (bottom) derived from Meteosat-5
for 1 Aug 04 at 07 UTC is shown in Figure 4;
surface shortwave downward flux (W/m2) at 0.125° resolution from Meteosat-5
(top) and at 2.5° resolution from ISCCP D1 (bottom) is given in Figure
5. The Tibetan Plateau is the highest and biggest plateau of the world - "the roof of the world". The Plateau is interspersed with mountain ranges and its atmospheric environment has a great influence on the regional as well as global climate. Radiative fluxes play an important role in understanding the energy budget of this complex region and its hydrological cycle. Selected results will be illustrated. Instantaneous surface shortwave downward fluxes from Meteosat-5 for selected hours on July 1, 1998 at 0.125° resolution are shown in Figure 1; frequency of occurrence of convective clouds over the Tibetan Plateau at selected hours for the peak-monsoon season (Jun - Sep) 2001 is shown in Figure 2; comparison of monthly mean total cloud amount (%) at 06 UTC for each month of the 2001 monsoon season for Meteosat-5, ERA-40 Reanalysis, NCEP/NCAR Re-analysis, and ISCCP at 30° N and 82.5° E is shown in Figure 3. The "Elevated Heat Pump" Hypothesis It has been
postulated that aerosol-induced anomalous mid-and upper-tropospheric
warming above the Tibetan Plateau leads to an early onset and intensification
of monsoon rainfall. This so-called "Elevated Heat Pump" effect
is based on results from the NASA finite-volume general circulation
model with and without radiative forcing from different types of aerosols
(Lau et al., 2006)*. Evaluation
of the EHP hypothesis: Selected findings
Enhanced convection in the foothills of the Himalayas and northward
shift in precipitation in May was not observed Impact
of Aerosols on Shortwave Flux Retrieval
Methodologies have been dveloped to implement global scale spectral radiative flux schemes with MODIS 1 deg products. An example of monthly mean Photosynthetically Active Radiation for February 2003 is shown in Figure 1. * Lau K-M, Kim MK, Kim KM (2006). Asian summer monsoon anomalies induced by aerosol direct forcing: the role of the Tibetan Plateau. Clim Dyn 26:855-864 |