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    EAST ASIAN MONSOON

    edited by C-P Chang (Naval Postgraduate School, USA)

    About C-P Chang


    The East Asian summer monsoon has complex space and time structures that are distinct from the South Asian summer monsoon. It covers both subtropics and midlatitudes and its rainfall tends to be concentrated in rain belts that stretch for many thousands of kilometers and affect China, Japan, Korea, and the surrounding areas. The circulation of the East Asian winter monsoon encompasses a large meridional domain with cold air outbreaks emanating from the Siberian high and penetrates deeply into the equatorial Maritime Continent region, where the center of maximum rainfall has long been recognized as a major planetary scale heat source that provides a significant amount of energy which drives the global circulation during boreal winter.

    The East Asian summer monsoon is also closely linked with the West Pacific summer monsoon. Both are part of the global climate system and are affected by El Nino—Southern Oscillation (ENSO) and surface temperature variations in the western Pacific and surrounding oceans, the tropospheric biennial oscillation, and the South Asian summer monsoon. In addition, typhoons in the western North Pacific are most active during the East Asian summer monsoon. They may be considered as a component of the East Asian summer monsoon as they contribute substantial amounts of rainfall and have major impacts on the region.

    Because of its impacts on nearly one-third of the world's population and on the global climate system (including effects on the climate change), the study of the East Asian monsoon has received increased attention both in East Asian countries and in the United States. This book presents reviews of recent research on the subject.

     
    Contents:
    • East Asian Summer and Winter Monsoon:
      • Seasonal March of the East-Asian Summer Monsoon (Y Ding)
      • The East Asia Winter Monsoon (J Chan & C Li)
      • Maritime Continent Monsoon: Annual Cycle and Boreal Winter Variability (C-P Chang, P A Harr, J McBride & H-H Hsu)
    • Interannual Variations:
      • Interannual Variability, Global Teleconnection, and Potential Predictability Associated with the Asian Summer Monsoon (W K-M Lau, K-M Kim & J-Y Lee)
      • East Asian Monsoon — ENSO Interactions (B Wang & T Li)
      • Climate Variations of the Summer Monsoon over China (R Huang, G Huang & Z Wei)
    • General Circulation Modeling:
      • Simulations by a GFDL GCM of ENSO-Related Variability of the Coupled Atmosphere-Ocean System in the East Asian Monsoon Region (N-C Lau, M J Nath & H Wang)
      • Current Status of AGCM Monsoon Simulations (I-S Kang)
      • Simulation Studies of the Asian Monsoon Using the CCSR/NIES AGCM (A Sumi, M Kimoto & X Shen)
    • Synoptic and Mesoscale Processes:
      • Research on the Phenomena of Meiyu during the Past Quarter Century: An Overview (G T-J Chen)
      • Large- and Mesoscale Features of Meiyu-Baiu Front Associated with Intense Rainfalls (K Ninomiya)
      • Oceanic East Asian Monsoon Convection: Results from the 1998 SCSMEX (R H Johnson, P E Ciesielski & T D Keenan)
    • Interactions with Other Circulations:
      • Monsoon-Related Tropical Cyclones in East Asia (R L Elsberry)
      • Formation of the Summertime Subtropical Anticyclones (G Wu, Y Liu & P Liu)
      • Maintenance and Seasonal Transitions of the Stationary Waves during East Asian Monsoon (M Ting & R Joseph)
     
    Readership: Graduate students, academics and researchers in meteorology/climatology, and weather forecasting services.
     
     
    572pp    Pub. date: Nov 2004  
    ISBN:   978-981-238-769-1
    981-238-769-2
       US$182 / £120

     


    572pp    Pub. date: Nov 2004  
    ISBN:   978-981-270-141-1(ebook)
    981-270-141-9(ebook)
       US$237 / £156

     


     

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    Updated on 18 May 2012