Impacts of the Land-sea Distribution around Korean Peninsula on the simulation of East Asia Summer Precipitation

동아시아 여름 강수 모의에 있어 한반도 주변 해륙분포가 미치는 영향

  • Cha, Yu-Mi (Climate Research Team, National Institute of Meteorological Research) ;
  • Lee, Hyo-Shin (Climate Research Team, National Institute of Meteorological Research) ;
  • Kwon, Won-Tae (Climate Research Team, National Institute of Meteorological Research) ;
  • Boo, Kyung-On (Climate Research Team, National Institute of Meteorological Research)
  • 차유미 (국립기상연구소 기후연구팀) ;
  • 이효신 (국립기상연구소 기후연구팀) ;
  • 권원태 (국립기상연구소 기후연구팀) ;
  • 부경온 (국립기상연구소 기후연구팀)
  • Received : 2007.05.07
  • Accepted : 2007.07.07
  • Published : 2007.09.30

Abstract

This paper investigates summer precipitation change in East Asia according to switching surface boundary condition over South Korea and Shantung. Simulations are carried out by ECHO-G/S for 20 years (1980-1999). Surface condition over both areas in ECHO-G/S is represented by ocean (OCN experiment). In OCN experiment, the summer precipitation is considerably underestimated around the Korean peninsula (the dry region) and overestimated over the eastern Tibetan Plateau (the wet region). It may be related that the lack of the heat sources from the unrealistically prescribed land-sea mask weakens northward expansion of rainband and the development of convective precipitation. Moreover the simulated rainband retreats before June in connection with the early genesis of summer monsoon circulation. The systematic bias of the summer precipitation over the dry and wet regions are reduced comparing with the OCN experiment when the land-sea masks over South Korea and Shantung are realistically considered as land (LND experiment). These improvements can be explained by the thermodynamical dissimilarity between land and ocean. Enhanced warming by switching the areas from sea to land has led to develop the thermal low over Yellow Sea with the cyclonic circulation. Thus, this cyclonic circulation supports moistures from the south to the dry region and blocks to the wet region. The heat transport from the land surface to atmosphere plays a key role in the developing convective precipitation in local scale and maintaining the precipitation and the rainband. Therefore, this results indicate that the design of the realistic land-sea distribution is required for the accurate simulation of the regional precipitation.

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