Abstract

AbstractIn this study, rainfall estimates by the Tropical Rainfall Measuring Mission are used to understand the spatiotemporal structures of convection in the intraseasonal time scale and their intensity during the boreal summer over South Asia. A quantitative analysis on how these intraseasonal modes modulate the central Indian rainfall is also provided.Two dominant modes of variability with periodicities of 10–20 and 20–60 days are found, with the latter strongly modulated by sea surface temperature. The 20–60-day mode shows northward propagation from the equatorial Indian Ocean linked with eastward-propagating modes of convective systems over the tropics. The 10–20-day mode shows a complex space–time structure with a northwestward-propagating anomalous pattern emanating from the Indonesian coast. This pattern is found to be interacting with a structure emerging from higher latitudes propagating southeastward, the development of which is attributed to the vertical shear of the zonal wind. The two modes exhibit profound variability in their intensity on the interannual time scale and they contribute a comparable amount to the daily rainfall variability in a season. The intensity of the 20–60 and 10–20-day modes shows a significantly strong inverse and direct relationship with the all-India June–September rainfall, respectively.This study establishes that the probability of the occurrence of substantial rainfall over central India increases significantly if the two intraseasonal modes simultaneously exhibit positive anomalies over the region. The results presented in this paper will provide a pathway to understand, using observations and numerical model simulations, intraseasonal variability and its relative contribution to the Indian summer monsoon. It can also be used for model evaluation.

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