학술논문

AIRS observations of seasonal variability in meridional temperature gradient over Indian region at 100 hPa.
Document Type
Article
Source
Journal of Earth System Science. Feb2013, Vol. 122 Issue 1, p201-213. 13p.
Subject
*SEASONAL temperature variations
*ARTIFICIAL satellites in earth sciences
*RADIATION
*MONSOONS
Language
ISSN
0253-4126
Abstract
To investigate the temperature changes at 100 hPa over Indian region from Arabian Sea (AS) to Bay of Bengal (BOB), analysis is performed using Atmospheric Infra Red Sounder (AIRS) temperature and outgoing long-wave radiation (OLR) data of 9 years (2003-2011). Fine-scale temperature variations have been studied and shown for summer (March-April-May, MAM), summer monsoon (June-July-August-September, JJAS) and winter (November-December-January-February, NDJF) months. Similarities and differences in the latitudinal and longitudinal variation of temperature and the possible causes have been examined. During MAM and NDJF, the temperature increases latitudinally by ~2-3 K and ~4-5 K from 3.5° to 20.5°N, respectively. However, the temperature decreases by ~2.0-2.5 K during JJAS. A similar contrasting behaviour is observed in latitudinal temperature gradient. For MAM and NDJF, the gradient decreases from ~0.18 to ~0.14 K/deg and ~0.25 to ~0.18 K/deg, respectively, as we move longitudinally from 60° to 90°E; however, for JJAS, it increases from ~0.10 to ~0.14 K/deg over the same longitudes. It is found that latitudinal temperature gradient for NDJF is larger by about a factor of 1.5. Analysis suggests latitudinal change in temperature occurs due to low OLR (proxy of convection) and its northward progression during summer monsoon. Correlation coefficient ( R) between OLR and temperature is computed latitudinally (3.5° to 20.5°N) at different longitudes and during JJAS (monsoon months), R is negative (~−0.73) over 60° and 70°E longitudes, but it turns positive (~0.92) over 80° and 90°E longitudes (which is convectively active region), suggesting a close association between low temperature and low OLR. Land-sea contrast is also observed in temperature at 100 hPa with a slight increase (~0.5 K) from sea to land. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]