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Role of the West African Westerly Jet in Sahel Rainfall Variations

Role of the West African Westerly Jet in Sahel Rainfall Variations The West African westerly jet is a low-level feature of the summer climatology that transports moisture from the eastern Atlantic onto the African continent at 8°–11°N. This study examines the relationship between the jet and Sahel precipitation variability in August, when both the jet and rainfall reach their seasonal maxima. Variations of the West African westerly jet are significantly positively correlated with precipitation variations over the Sahel on both interannual and decadal time scales. Three periods are identified (1958–71, 1972–87, and 1988–2009), corresponding to times with a wet Sahel–strong jet, dry Sahel–weak jet, and relatively wet Sahel–strong jet. In wet (dry) periods, enhanced (decreased) westerly moisture fluxes associated with a strong (weak) jet increase (decrease) the low-level moisture content over the Sahel, decreasing (enhancing) the stability of the atmosphere. This association between the jet and Sahel rainfall is also found in case studies of 1964, 1984, 1999, and 2007. The southerly moisture flux associated with the West African monsoon has less pronounced decadal variability than the westerly moisture flux of the West African westerly jet and weaker correlations with Sahel rainfall. When the monsoon flow is weak, for example, 1999 and 2007, the Sahel may still experience positive precipitation anomalies in association with strong westerly moisture transport by the jet. The West African westerly jet is also important for stabilizing the regional vorticity balance by introducing strong relative vorticity gradients. Northward flow advects low relative vorticity south of the jet to balance positive vorticity tendencies generated by midtropospheric condensation. http://www.deepdyve.com/assets/images/DeepDyve-Logo-lg.png Journal of Climate American Meteorological Society

Role of the West African Westerly Jet in Sahel Rainfall Variations

Journal of Climate , Volume 25 (8) – Jul 14, 2011

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Publisher
American Meteorological Society
Copyright
Copyright © 2011 American Meteorological Society
ISSN
0894-8755
eISSN
1520-0442
DOI
10.1175/JCLI-D-11-00394.1
Publisher site
See Article on Publisher Site

Abstract

The West African westerly jet is a low-level feature of the summer climatology that transports moisture from the eastern Atlantic onto the African continent at 8°–11°N. This study examines the relationship between the jet and Sahel precipitation variability in August, when both the jet and rainfall reach their seasonal maxima. Variations of the West African westerly jet are significantly positively correlated with precipitation variations over the Sahel on both interannual and decadal time scales. Three periods are identified (1958–71, 1972–87, and 1988–2009), corresponding to times with a wet Sahel–strong jet, dry Sahel–weak jet, and relatively wet Sahel–strong jet. In wet (dry) periods, enhanced (decreased) westerly moisture fluxes associated with a strong (weak) jet increase (decrease) the low-level moisture content over the Sahel, decreasing (enhancing) the stability of the atmosphere. This association between the jet and Sahel rainfall is also found in case studies of 1964, 1984, 1999, and 2007. The southerly moisture flux associated with the West African monsoon has less pronounced decadal variability than the westerly moisture flux of the West African westerly jet and weaker correlations with Sahel rainfall. When the monsoon flow is weak, for example, 1999 and 2007, the Sahel may still experience positive precipitation anomalies in association with strong westerly moisture transport by the jet. The West African westerly jet is also important for stabilizing the regional vorticity balance by introducing strong relative vorticity gradients. Northward flow advects low relative vorticity south of the jet to balance positive vorticity tendencies generated by midtropospheric condensation.

Journal

Journal of ClimateAmerican Meteorological Society

Published: Jul 14, 2011

References