4.5 Article

The Quasi-Biweekly Oscillation of Winter Precipitation Associated with ENSO over Southern China

Journal

ATMOSPHERE
Volume 9, Issue 10, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/atmos9100406

Keywords

winter precipitation; quasi-biweekly oscillation; ENSO

Funding

  1. National Key R&D Program of China [2016YFA0600402]
  2. National 973 Project [2015CB453200]
  3. Priority Academic Program Development of Jiangsu Higher Education Institutions (PAPD)

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Using ERA-interim Reanalysis data and observational data, the intraseasonal oscillation of the winter rainfall in southern China is studied. The mean square deviation of daily precipitation is used to express precipitation variability, and winter precipitation variability over southern China is determined to be highly correlated with sea surface temperature (SST) in central and eastern tropical Pacific; the dominant period of the precipitation is 10-30 days, which reflects quasi-biweekly oscillation. Examination of 1000 hPa geopotential height suggests that key low-pressure systems affecting the intraseasonal precipitation come from Lake Baikal, but with different travel paths. In El Nino years, key low-pressure systems converge with other low-pressure systems and move southeastward until reaching South China, while in La Nina years, only one low-pressure system can reach southern China. Meanwhile, the explosive development of the low-pressure system is mainly caused by the joint effects of thermal advection and vorticity advection in El Nino, and only vorticity advection accounted for the dominant status in La Nina. Multiscale analysis shows that the meridional distribution of intraseasonal circulation plays an important role on the thermal transmission and brings strong warm advection from low latitudes to high latitudes in El Nino.

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