Abstract

AbstractThe interannual variation of the Indian summer monsoon (ISM) affects millions of people in India and the global weather and climate. The teleconnections that affect this variation are not stable. The recent four decades of the second dominant mode of ISM rainfall show a unique north–south tripole pattern, with above‐normal rainfall in the north and peninsular India sandwiching suppressed rainfall in central‐east India. The pattern relates to extending the Indo‐Pacific warm‐pool's warmer sea‐surface temperature (SST) towards the south of the equatorial eastern Indian Ocean. Most of the time, this warming and the extension of the warm‐pool's warmer SST are associated with La Niña events, which activate more in situ vigorous convection. The Rossby‐gyres generated west of the equatorial heating increase the tropospheric height over north India, shifting and strengthening the Tibetan High northwards, facilitating heavy rainfall in the north. Meanwhile, the more vigorous convection south of the equatorial eastern Indian Ocean produces compensatory subsidence over central‐east India, suppressing rainfall. The northern hemispheric Rossby‐gyres brings anomalous cyclonic circulation over peninsular India, producing excess rainfall. Also, the dipole pressure anomaly between the northwest Pacific and south tropical Indian Ocean generates anomalous lower‐level easterly winds over the Bay of Bengal. It supplies excess moisture to the north India convections. The co‐occurrence of the active Atlantic intertropical convergence zone supports this tripole rainfall pattern. This teleconnection could further be examined in climate models.

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