Atmosphere (May 2021)

Longer Time-Scale Variability of Atmospheric Vertical Motion over the Tibetan Plateau and North Pacific and the Climate in East Asia

  • Rongxiang Tian,
  • Yaoming Ma,
  • Weiqiang Ma,
  • Xiuyi Zhao,
  • Duo Zha

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/atmos12050630
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12, no. 5
p. 630

Abstract

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The vertical motion of air is closely related to the amount of precipitation that falls in a particular region. The Tibetan Plateau and the North Pacific are important determinants of the East Asian climate. We use climate diagnosis and statistical analysis to study the vertical motion of the air over the North Pacific and Tibetan Plateau and the relationship between the vertical motion of air over them and the climate in East Asia. Here we show that there is a downward movement of air over the Tibetan Plateau during the winter, with a maximum velocity of downward movement at 500 hPa, whereas there is an upward movement of air with a maximum velocity of upward movement at 600 hPa during the summer. Precipitation in East Asia has a significant negative correlation (The correlation coefficient exceeds −0.463 and confidence level is greater than 99%) with the vertical motion of air over the Tibetan Plateau and the North Pacific during both the winter and summer. There is also a negative correlation of precipitation in the region south of the Yangtze River with the vertical motion of air over the Tibetan Plateau in winter, whereas the area of negative correlation to the vertical motion of air over the North Pacific in winter is located to the east of the Tibetan Plateau and the Yangtze–Huaihe river basin. The research results provide a climatic framework for the vertical motion of air over both the Tibetan Plateau and the North Pacific.

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