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Seasonal persistence and propagation of intraseasonal patterns over the Indian monsoon region

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Abstract

The space-time evolution of convection over the monsoon region containing the Indian subcontinent, the Indian Ocean and the West Pacific has been studied. A multi-channel singular spectrum analysis of the daily outgoing longwave radiation has yielded two intraseasonal oscillatory patterns and two large-scale standing patterns as the most dominant modes of intraseasonal variability. The oscillatory modes vary on time scales of about 45 and 28 days and their average cycles of variability are shown to correspond to the life cycles of active and break periods of monsoon rainfall over India. During an active (break) cycle, a convection (dry) anomaly zone first appears in the equatorial Indian Ocean, subsequently expands to cover the Indian subcontinent and finally contracts to disappear in the northern part of India. Some eastward and northward movements are found to be associated with both oscillatory modes, while westward movement may also be associated with the 28-day mode. The oscillatory modes are shown to have a large spatial scale extending to the West Pacific. One of the standing modes has anomalies of uniform sign covering the entire region and is related to El Niño and southern oscillation (ENSO) pattern. The other standing mode has a dipole structure in the equatorial Indian Ocean associated with large-scale anomalies over India with the same sign as those over the western part of the dipole. These two standing modes persist throughout the monsoon season, each maintaining its respective pattern. The seasonal mean monsoon is mainly determined by the two standing patterns, without much contribution from the oscillatory modes. The relative role of the standing patterns (ENSO mode and dipole mode) seems to be important in determining the seasonal mean during certain years.

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Acknowledgments

This research was supported by grants from the National Science Foundation (0334910), the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NA040AR4310034), and the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NNG04GG46G). The authors thank B. N. Goswami and R. S. Ajaya Mohan for providing the active and break dates from their work.

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Krishnamurthy, V., Shukla, J. Seasonal persistence and propagation of intraseasonal patterns over the Indian monsoon region. Clim Dyn 30, 353–369 (2008). https://doi.org/10.1007/s00382-007-0300-7

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