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Published October 2006 | public
Journal Article Open

Vertical Moist Thermodynamic Structure and Spatial–Temporal Evolution of the MJO in AIRS Observations

Abstract

The atmospheric moisture and temperature profiles from the Atmospheric Infrared Sounder (AIRS)/Advanced Microwave Sounding Unit on the NASA Aqua mission, in combination with the precipitation from the Tropical Rainfall Measuring Mission (TRMM), are employed to study the vertical moist thermodynamic structure and spatial–temporal evolution of the Madden–Julian oscillation (MJO). The AIRS data indicate that, in the Indian Ocean and western Pacific, the temperature anomaly exhibits a trimodal vertical structure: a warm (cold) anomaly in the free troposphere (800–250 hPa) and a cold (warm) anomaly near the tropopause (above 250 hPa) and in the lower troposphere (below 800 hPa) associated with enhanced (suppressed) convection. The AIRS moisture anomaly also shows markedly different vertical structures as a function of longitude and the strength of convection anomaly. Most significantly, the AIRS data demonstrate that, over the Indian Ocean and western Pacific, the enhanced (suppressed) convection is generally preceded in both time and space by a low-level warm and moist (cold and dry) anomaly and followed by a low-level cold and dry (warm and moist) anomaly. The MJO vertical moist thermodynamic structure from the AIRS data is in general agreement, particularly in the free troposphere, with previous studies based on global reanalysis and limited radiosonde data. However, major differences in the lower-troposphere moisture and temperature structure between the AIRS observations and the NCEP reanalysis are found over the Indian and Pacific Oceans, where there are very few conventional data to constrain the reanalysis. Specifically, the anomalous lower-troposphere temperature structure is much less well defined in NCEP than in AIRS for the western Pacific, and even has the opposite sign anomalies compared to AIRS relative to the wet/dry phase of the MJO in the Indian Ocean. Moreover, there are well-defined eastward-tilting variations of moisture with height in AIRS over the central and eastern Pacific that are less well defined, and in some cases absent, in NCEP. In addition, the correlation between MJO-related midtropospheric water vapor anomalies and TRMM precipitation anomalies is considerably more robust in AIRS than in NCEP, especially over the Indian Ocean. Overall, the AIRS results are quite consistent with those predicted by the frictional Kelvin–Rossby wave/conditional instability of the second kind (CISK) theory for the MJO.

Additional Information

© 2006 American Meteorological Society Manuscript received 15 November 2005, in final form 3 March 2006 This work was supported by the AIRS project at Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL) and JPL's Research and Technology Development program. In addition, the second author was supported by JPL's Human Resources Development fund. The research at JPL, California Institute of Technology was performed under contracts with the National Aeronautics and Space Administration. The AIRS level 3 data as well as the NCEP PREPQC radiosonde data were provided by Stephanie Granger, Ed Olsen, and Sung-Yung Lee, who also provided assistance in the analysis. The TRMM 3B42 rainfall data were downloaded from GSFC DAAC web site. The NCEP and NCEP2 reanalysis data were provided by the NOAA–CIRES Climate Diagnostics Center, Boulder, Colorado, from their Web site. Insightful reviews and constructive comments from George Kiladis and two anonymous reviewers as well as helpful discussions with Mous Chahine, Evan Fishbein, Xiouhua Fu, William Lau, and Ken Sperber are appreciated. The first author also wants to thank Mike Black and Xun Jiang for programming help.

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Created:
August 22, 2023
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October 16, 2023