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American Geophysical Union, Journal of Geophysical Research, D9(112), 2007

DOI: 10.1029/2006jd007712

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Have Australian rainfall and cloudiness increased due to the remote effects of Asian anthropogenic aerosols?

This paper is available in a repository.
This paper is available in a repository.

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Abstract

There is ample evidence that anthropogenic aerosols have important effects on cli-mate in the Northern Hemisphere, but little such evidence in the Southern Hemisphere. Ob-servations of Australian rainfall and cloudiness since 1950 show increases over much of the continent. We show that including anthropogenic aerosol changes in 20th Century simulations of a global climate model gives increasing rainfall and cloudiness over Australia during 1951– 1996, whereas omitting this forcing gives decreasing rainfall and cloudiness. The pattern of increasing rainfall when aerosols are included is strongest over northwestern Australia, in agree-ment with the observed trends. The strong impact of aerosols is primarily due to the massive Asian aerosol haze, as confirmed by a sensitivity test in which only Asian anthropogenic aerosols are included. The Asian haze alters the meridional temperature and pressure gradients over the tropical Indian Ocean, thereby increasing the tendency of monsoonal winds to flow towards Australia. Anthropogenic aerosols also make the simulated pattern of surface-temperature change in the tropical Pacific more like La Niña, since they induce a cooling of the surface waters in the extratropical North Pacific, which are then transported to the tropical eastern Pacific via the deep ocean. Transient climate model simulations forced only by increased greenhouse gases have generally not reproduced the observed rainfall increase over northwestern and central Aus-tralia. Our results suggest that a possible reason for this failure was the omission of forcing by Asian aerosols. Further research is essential to more accurately quantify the role of Asian aerosols in forcing Australian climate change.