Impacts of the Kuroshio intrusion through the luzon strait on the local precipitation anomaly

Wen Pin Fang, Ding Rong Wu, Zhe Wen Zheng*, Ganesh Gopalakrishnan, Chung Ru Ho, Quanan Zheng, Chen Fen Huang, Hua Ho, Min Chuan Weng

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

3 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

The Kuroshio Current has its origin in the northwestern Pacific, flowing northward to the east of Taiwan and the northern part of Luzon Island. As the Kuroshio Current flows northward, it quasi-periodically intrudes (hereafter referred to as Kuroshio intrusion (KI)) into the northern South China Sea (SCS) basin through the Luzon Strait. Despite the complex generation mechanisms of KI, the purpose of this study is to improve our understanding of the effects of KI through the Luzon Strait on the regional atmospheric and weather variations. Long-term multiple satellite observations, including absolute dynamic topography, absolute geostrophic currents, sea surface winds by ASCAT, multi-scale ultra-high resolution sea surface temperature (MURSST) level-four analysis, and research-quality three-hourly TRMM multi-satellite precipitation analysis (TMPA), was used to systematically examine the aforementioned scientific problem. Analysis indicates that the KI is interlinked with the consequential anomalous precipitation off southwestern Taiwan. This anomalous precipitation would lead to ~560 million tons of freshwater influx during each KI event. Subsequently, independent moisture budget analysis suggests that moisture, mainly from vertical advection, is the possible source of the precipitation anomaly. Additionally, a bulk formula analysis was applied to understand how KI can trigger the precipitation anomaly through vertical advection of moisture without causing an evident change in the low-level flows. These new research findings might reconcile the divisiveness on why winds are not showing a synchronous response during the KI and consequential anomalous precipitation events.

Original languageEnglish
Article number1113
JournalRemote Sensing
Volume13
Issue number6
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2021 Mar 2

Keywords

  • Atmospheric re-sponses
  • Kuroshio intrusion
  • Luzon Strait
  • Precipitation
  • South China Sea
  • Winds

ASJC Scopus subject areas

  • General Earth and Planetary Sciences

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