6533b857fe1ef96bd12b4f52

RESEARCH PRODUCT

Intercomparison and analyses of the climatology of the West African Monsoon in the West African Monsoon Modeling and Evaluation project (WAMME) first model intercomparison experiment

Siegfried D. SchubertWilliam K. M. LauAndrea SealyJae SchemmAaron BooneFernando De SalesJinming FengJinming FengDavid P. RowellWilfran Moufouma-okiaAkio KitohWassila M. ThiawNatalie M. MahowaldKyu-myong KimZhichang GuoMan-li C. WuIsabelle Poccard-leclercqPhillip PegionVadlamani KumarAugustin VintzileosYongkang XueSteven F. WilliamsPaul A. Dirmeyer

subject

Atmospheric Science010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciences[SDE.MCG]Environmental Sciences/Global Changes0207 environmental engineeringTropical Easterly JetEmpirical orthogonal functions02 engineering and technologySensible heatOceanographyMonsoon01 natural sciencesMeteorology/ClimatologyLatent heatGeophysics/GeodesyPrecipitation020701 environmental engineering0105 earth and related environmental sciencesAfrican easterly jet[ SDE.MCG ] Environmental Sciences/Global ChangesSea surface temperature[SDU.STU.CL]Sciences of the Universe [physics]/Earth Sciences/Climatology13. Climate actionClimatologyEarth SciencesEnvironmental science[ SDU.STU.CL ] Sciences of the Universe [physics]/Earth Sciences/Climatology

description

International audience; This paper briefly presents the West African Monsoon (WAM) Modeling and Evaluation Project (WAMME) and evaluates WAMME general circulation models' (GCM) performances in simulating variability of WAM precipitation, surface temperature, and major circulation features at seasonal and intraseasonal scales in the first WAMME experiment. The analyses indicate that models with specified sea surface temperature generally have reasonable simulations of the pattern of spatial distribution of WAM seasonal mean precipitation and surface temperature as well as the averaged zonal wind in latitude-height cross-section and low level circulation. But there are large differences among models in simulating spatial correlation, intensity, and variance of precipitation compared with observations. Furthermore, the majority of models fail to produce proper intensities of the African Easterly Jet (AEJ) and the tropical easterly jet. AMMA Land Surface Model Intercomparison Project (ALMIP) data are used to analyze the association between simulated surface processes and the WAM and to investigate the WAM mechanism. It has been identified that the spatial distributions of surface sensible heat flux, surface temperature, and moisture convergence are closely associated with the simulated spatial distribution of precipitation; while surface latent heat flux is closely associated with the AEJ and contributes to divergence in AEJ simulation. Common empirical orthogonal functions (CEOF) analysis is applied to characterize the WAM precipitation evolution and has identi- fied a major WAM precipitation mode and two temperature modes (Sahara mode and Sahel mode). Results indicate that the WAMME models produce reasonable temporal evolutions of major CEOF modes but have deficiencies/ uncertainties in producing variances explained by major modes. Furthermore, the CEOF analysis shows that WAM precipitation evolution is closely related to the enhanced Sahara mode and the weakened Sahel mode, supporting the evidence revealed in the analysis using ALMIP data. An analysis of variability of CEOF modes suggests that the Sahara mode leads the WAM evolution, and divergence in simulating this mode contributes to discrepancies in the precipitation simulation.

https://doi.org/10.1007/s00382-010-0778-2