JpGU-AGU Joint Meeting 2020

Presentation information

[E] Poster

A (Atmospheric and Hydrospheric Sciences ) » A-AS Atmospheric Sciences, Meteorology & Atmospheric Environment

[A-AS10] Land-Atmosphere interactions and precipitation variations over the Asian monsoon region.

convener:Hiroshi G. Takahashi(Department of Geography, Tokyo Metropolitan University), Hirokazu Endo(Meteorological Research Institute, Japan Meteorological Agency), Shiori Sugimoto(JAMSTEC Japan Agency for Marine-Earth Science and Technology), Hatsuki Fujinami(Nagoya University)

[AAS10-P08] Regional snowfall and precipitation distributions in a Japan-Sea side of central Japan associated with low-frequency variabilities in the Eurasian and East Asian regions

*Akira Yamazaki1, Meiji Honda2, Hiroaki Kawase3 (1.Application Laboratory, Japan Agency for Marine-Earth Science and Technology, 2.Niigata University, 3.Meteorological Research Institute, Japan Mereorological Agency)

This study found that regional snowfall distributions in a Japan-Sea side area of Japan are controlled by intraseasonal jet variability, particularly the 10-day-timescale quasi-stationary Rossby waves across the Eurasian continent and the atmospheric blocking over the East Asian region. Our results revealed that distribution types in which heavy snowfall events occurred over the area were related to the southward shift of the westerly jet over Japan associated with an intensified trough, i.e., cyclonic anomalies, originating from quasi-stationary Rossby waves along westerly jets over Eurasia (Eurasian jets). The cyclonic anomalies were found to be also related to blocking cyclones because the frequency of blocking events considerably increased in the East Siberian region.
Similar data analyses were conducted for regional precipitation distributions in the same area. Climatological features of the precipitation, such as seasonal marches and interannual frequencies were different from those for the snowfall events. However, composite fields for heavy precipitation events rather show similar features near Japan Island, such as the cyclonic anomalies, with those for the snowfall events. Those results imply that underlying mechanisms and/or boundary conditions which connect the global with the local atmospheric circulations can be different between the heavy snowfall and precipitation events.