4.7 Article

Impact of the Agulhas Current on Southern Africa Precipitation: A Modeling Study

Journal

JOURNAL OF CLIMATE
Volume 34, Issue 24, Pages 9973-9988

Publisher

AMER METEOROLOGICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1175/JCLI-D-20-0627.1

Keywords

Atmosphere-ocean interaction; Boundary currents; Precipitation; Regional models

Funding

  1. University of Cape Town
  2. National Research Foundation SARCHi chair on Ocean-Atmosphere Modeling, WRC , ACCESS, DAAD South Africa
  3. Nansen Tutu Centre for MarineE nvironmental Research
  4. Research Council of Norway [234205, 309457]
  5. ERC [648982]
  6. EU H2020 TRIATLAS projects [817578]
  7. European Research Council (ERC) [648982] Funding Source: European Research Council (ERC)

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The study utilized simulations to demonstrate the seasonal impact of the warm core of the Agulhas Current on precipitation in southern Africa. It was found that reducing the temperature of the current led to a decrease in precipitation during the wettest seasons, with a mechanism related to pressure adjustment.
The Agulhas Current (AC) creates a sharp temperature gradient with the surrounding ocean, leading to a large turbulent flux of moisture from ocean to atmosphere. We use two simulations of the Weather Research and Forecasting (WRF) Model to show the seasonal impact of the warm core of the AC on southern Africa precipitation. In one simulation the sea surface temperature (SST) of the AC is similar to satellite observations, while the second uses satellite SST observations spatially smoothed to reduce the temperature of the core of the AC by similar to 1.5 degrees C. We show that decreasing the SST of the AC reduces the precipitation of the wettest seasons (austral summer and autumn) inland. Over the ocean, reducing the SST reduces precipitation, low-level wind convergence, SST, and SLP Laplacian above the AC in all seasons, consistent with the pressure adjustment mechanism. Moreover, winter precipitation above the AC may also be related to increased latent flux. In summer and autumn, the AC SST reduction is also associated with decreased precipitation farther inland (more than 1.5 mm day(-1)), caused by an atmospheric circulation that decreases the horizontal moisture flux from the AC to South Africa. The reduction is also associated with higher geopotential height extending from the surface east and over the AC to the midtroposphere over southeastern Africa. The westward tilted geopotential height is consistent with the linear response to shallow diabatic heating in midlatitudes. An identical mechanism occurs in spring but is weaker. Winter rainfall response is confined above the AC.

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