Impact of the Indian part of the summer MJO on West Africa using nudged climate simulations - Université Pierre et Marie Curie Accéder directement au contenu
Article Dans Une Revue Climate Dynamics Année : 2012

Impact of the Indian part of the summer MJO on West Africa using nudged climate simulations

Résumé

Observational evidence suggests a link between the summer Madden Julian Oscillation (MJO) and anomalous convection over West Africa. This link is further studied with the help of the LMDZ atmospheric general circulation model. The approach is based on nudging the model towards the reanalysis in the Asian monsoon region. The simulation successfully captures the convection associated with the summer MJO in the nudging region. Outside this region the model is free to evolve. Over West Africa it simulates convection anomalies that are similar in magnitude, structure, and timing to the observed ones. In accordance with the observations, the simulation shows that 15-20 days after the maximum increase (decrease) of convection in the Indian Ocean there is a significant reduction (increase) in West African convection. The simulation strongly suggests that in addition to the eastward-moving MJO signal, the westward propagation of a convectively coupled equatorial Rossby wave is needed to explain the overall impact of the MJO on convection over West Africa. These results highlight the use of MJO events to potentially predict regional-scale anomalous convection and rainfall spells over West Africa with a time lag of approximately 15-20 days.

Dates et versions

hal-00753367 , version 1 (19-11-2012)

Identifiants

Citer

Elsa Mohino, Serge Janicot, Hervé Douville, Laurent Li. Impact of the Indian part of the summer MJO on West Africa using nudged climate simulations. Climate Dynamics, 2012, 38 (11-12), pp.2319-2334. ⟨10.1007/S00382-011-1206-Y⟩. ⟨hal-00753367⟩
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