Abstract

The advance of the onset of the Indian monsoon is here explained in terms of a balance between the low‐level monsoon flow and an overrunning intrusion of mid‐tropospheric dry air. The monsoon advances, over a period of about 6 weeks, from the south of the country to the northwest. Given that the low‐level monsoon winds are westerly or southwesterly, and the mid‐level winds northwesterly, the monsoon onset propagates upwind relative to mid‐level flow, and perpendicular to the low‐level flow, and is not directly caused by moisture flux toward the northwest. Lacking a conceptual model for the advance means that it has been hard to understand and correct known biases in weather and climate prediction models.The mid‐level northwesterlies form a wedge of dry air that is deep in the far northwest of India and over‐runs the monsoon flow. The dry layer is moistened from below by shallow cumulus and congestus clouds, so that the profile becomes much closer to moist adiabatic, and the dry layer is much shallower in the vertical, toward the southeast of India. The profiles associated with this dry air show how the most favourable environment for deep convection occurs in the south, and onset occurs here first.As the onset advances across India, the advection of moisture from the Arabian Sea becomes stronger, and the mid‐level dry air is increasingly moistened from below. This increased moistening makes the wedge of dry air shallower throughout its horizontal extent, and forces the northern limit of moist convection to move toward the northwest. Wetting of the land surface by rainfall will further reinforce the north‐westward progression, by sustaining the supply of boundary‐layer moisture and shallow cumulus. The local advance of the monsoon onset is coincident with weakening of the mid‐level northwesterlies, and therefore weakened mid‐level dry advection.

Highlights

  • The Indian monsoon affects the lives of more than a billion people in South Asia and supplies around 80% of the annual rainfall total between June and September

  • This is true of the monsoon onset, since its timing in relation to the sowing of crops is crucial for their survival

  • Journal of the Royal Meteorological Society published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd on behalf of the Royal Meteorological Society

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Summary

Introduction

The Indian monsoon affects the lives of more than a billion people in South Asia and supplies around 80% of the annual rainfall total between June and September. The largely agricultural society is highly dependent on monsoon rains and is very sensitive to any variation in their timing, intensity and duration. This is true of the monsoon onset, since its timing in relation to the sowing of crops is crucial for their survival. Journal of the Royal Meteorological Society published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd on behalf of the Royal Meteorological Society

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