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September 7, 2006

ASIAN SUMMER MONSOON STIRRED BY DUST IN THE WIND

Most of us typically think of dust as tiresome matter to be carelessly brushed away from atop furniture that has no bearing on the world outside. However, according to a new NASA study, a very different kind of dust, made up of small particles called aerosols, blows in from desert regions, collects in the atmosphere against the slopes of South Asia's Tibetan Plateau during the region's mighty monsoon season, and helps trigger -- rainfall.

A monsoon is a seasonal shift in wind direction that brings alternate very wet and very dry seasons to India and much of Southeast Asia.

NASA research scientist William Lau of NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center, Greenbelt, Md., and his team studied the aerosols. They recently found that aerosols in the form of airborne dust lofted from the desert surface combined with black carbon from industrial emissions, bio-fuel burning, and forest fires can heat the air by absorbing the sun's radiation, which can alter the Asian monsoon cycle. Rains from this annual weather cycle are a lifeline to over 60 percent of the world's population. Up to now, not much was known about how aerosols interact with the atmosphere to influence monsoons.

Lau's computer simulations found that these heat-absorbing aerosols, when spun together with warm air currents and moisture, cause a heating effect in the air that triggers the rainy period earlier than usual, lengthening the monsoon season in Asia.

"Traditionally, aerosols have been seen as only a local environmental problem. Until very recently, aerosols have not been viewed as an intervening presence in the atmosphere that could affect monsoon rains," said Lau. "This study is the first to link dust aerosols to monsoon rainfall changes and to claim a specific physical mechanism in the atmosphere, whereby the tiny dust particles interact with the monsoon heat and moisture."

The mechanism operates like an "elevated heat pump," according to Lau. Increased dust or aerosols blowing in from western China, Afghanistan, Pakistan and the Middle East coupled with black carbon emissions from northern India accumulate before the monsoon in late spring against the northern and southern slopes of the Tibetan Plateau.

When the dust absorbs the sun's radiation, it heats the surface air hovering above the mountainous slopes of the region. The heated air rises, and draws warm, moist air in to northern India from the Indian Ocean, like a "heat pump." The warm moist air helps to create more rainfall. The rising motion or air associated with more rain in turn brings in more warm, moist air. The "heat pump" effect actually brings on the monsoon season prematurely in northern India, leading to a longer rainy season.

The rising motion associated with the "elevated heat pump” effect will shift the monsoon's path toward the foothills of the Himalayas, meaning that more rain will fall earlier in the season (in May) in northern India as a result, and less over the Indian Ocean to the south. The intensified heat and rain may cause increased mountain glacier melt, leading to more erosion in Nepal and near the Ganges River.

"An improved understanding of the effects of aerosols on the monsoon seasonal cycle benefits both science and society," said Lau. "Understanding the relationship between aerosols and the cycle of rainfall has a potential impact on water resources all over the globe."

Lau's research team is currently examining the aerosol effect on rainfall over South America and West Africa, where they are also finding that the “elevated heat pump” mechanism seems to be at work.

For more information and images on the Web, visit:
http://www.nasa.gov/centers/goddard/news/topstory/2006/asian_rain.html

For more information about climate research at NASA Goddard on the Web, visit:
http://climate.gsfc.nasa.gov/index.php

For more information about NASA's Earth Science missions on the Web, visit:
http://science.hq.nasa.gov/missions/earth.html

For more information about AERONET on the Web, visit:
http://aeronet.gsfc.nasa.gov/

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Contact:

Gretchen Cook-Anderson
NASA Goddard Space Flight Center
301-879-9200

This text is derived from:
http://www.nasa.gov/vision/earth/environment/asian_rain.html

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