Appendix a



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Atmospheric Heating

In the monsoons, the land-sea thermal contrast modifies circulation of the overlying atmosphere and precipitation develops. It is therefore important to evaluate how large-scale atmospheric heat and moisture budgets, as given by the well-known residuals Q1, the apparent heat source, and Q2, the apparent moisture sink, vary over space and time. This is especially useful in the study of the onset phase of the monsoon and its intraseasonal variability and in the analysis of the relative importance of sensible and condensation heating.


Precipitation

The analysis of temporal and spatial scales of precipitation and its characteristics is crucial for the determination of the water cycle and the evaluation of water reservoirs and the regional hydrologic cycle. Specific issues to be addressed are: the documentation and simulation of the diurnal cycle of precipitation and its characteristics (stratiform/convective) in relation to variation of air stability and wind flow; the understanding of orographic effects on precipitation pattern; the analysis of synoptic-mesoscale interaction through, for example, large-scale moisture transport and convergence and intraseasonal oscillations of the Asian monsoon system; the analysis of the structure of convection; and the study of the seasonal march and shift of precipitating areas (East-West, South-North, bottom-top).


Ocean Areas

In view of the importance of the land-sea thermal contrast in driving the monsoon, there is a need for an improvement of ocean data. These will include surface data (e.g., sea surface temperature, sensible, latent, water vapor and momentum fluxes, net radiation) as well as upper ocean (mixing layer) data (e.g., vertical thermal structure and heat flux).


MONSOON ISSUES

In relation to general discussions of the monsoon, some recommendations were made concerning both large-scale analyses and local-scale process studies. Within the annual cycle of the monsoon, it was suggested to focus especially on the onset phase (role of surface processes and of sea surface temperature anomalies) and on active/break cycles (and their relation, for example, to land-surface heat and moist processes, their intraseasonal oscillations and, in general, to the interactions among land, atmosphere and ocean processes).


Winter plays a very important role in the development of the Asian monsoon system, through the effect of anomalous snow cover and/or soil moisture. As a result, there was agreement to also study the relations between winter and summer monsoon circulation.
On the interannual scale, it is important to document how the variations in monsoon circulation are directly related to the local hydro-climate (including glacier lake outburst floods) and to the availability of water reservoirs. The main questions in these cases being: What are large-scale and long term factors that control these and to what degree can the related water fluxes can be simulated and predicted?
Moreover, monsoon systems have to be compared in view of a global monsoon climate system, in a search for not only differences and similarities but also interconnections. This will be directly translated into the CIMS "telescoping" approach, which coordinates model integrations from general circulation models of the atmosphere, through regional climate models to cloud resolving models.

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