Abstract

ABSTRACT Water vapor, the most important greenhouse gas in the atmosphere, has four natural stable isotopologues (H2 16O, H2 17O, H2 18O and HD16O), and their isotopic compositions can be used as hydrological tracers. But the underlying processes and pattern-dynamics of the isotopic compositions of atmospheric water vapor and precipitation in response to various meteorological conditions during monsoon season in a tropical hot and humid region is poorly understood. Here, we present results of H and triple-O-isotopes of water in precipitation and atmospheric water vapor during monsoon season exploiting high-resolution integrated cavity output spectroscopy technique. We observed a distinct temporal variation of the isotopic compositions of water at different phases of the monsoon. The diurnal patterns of the isotopic variations were influenced by the local meteorological factors such as temperature, relative humidity and amount of precipitation. We also investigated the monsoonal dynamics of the second-order isotopic parameters, so-called d-excess and 17O-excess along with the influence of local meteorological factors on isotopic variations to improve our understanding of the underlying isotopic fractionation processes. Consequently, our results provide a unique isotopic-fingerprint dataset of rainwater and atmospheric water vapor for a tropical region and thus shed a new light on hydrological and meteorological processes in the atmosphere.

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