Planetary Boundary Layer Height Variations Over the Tibetan Plateau in Relation to Local Climate Variables and Large-Scale Circulation
Abstract
The lowest layer of the Earth's atmosphere, the planetary boundary layer (PBL), may reach
extremely high above the Tibetan Plateau (TP). Moreover, the TP is a hotspot region for
climate interactions, exerting far-reaching in
uences on atmospheric conditions. However,
very little is known about the temporal and spatial variations in planetary boundary layer
height (PBLH) across the vast plateau and how the PBLH may be related to other climate
variables. Therefore, this study utilises the recently available reanalysis dataset ERA5 to
investigate rstly how the PBLH has varied during the last four decades to establish a PBLH
climatology for the TP, and secondly how it may be related to local climate variables and
large-scale circulation. It is shown that the variations in TP PBLH are large. Over the
interior of the plateau the PBLH sometimes exceeds 6000 m in the afternoon, while it only
grows to about half of this height in the southeastern TP. PBLH trends range from -65 m
per decade in the monsoon season in central TP to +70 m per decade in southeastern TP
in the dry season, resulting in a very weak overall trend. The spatial patterns in the PBLH
trends are strikingly similar to the trends of surface sensible heat
ux, which is strongly
correlated with PBLH over most of the plateau in both the dry season and the monsoon
season, suggesting that surface sensible heat
ux is the dominating factor behind the PBLH
trends. In addition, it is found that even in the absence of a stratospheric intrusion the low
extra-tropical tropopause may reach very close to the high PBL tops which could potentially
lead to enhanced stratosphere-troposphere exchanges. Further, PBLH is analysed in relation
to large-scale climate indices such as the El Ni~no Southern Oscillation (ENSO) index and
the Indian Summer Monsoon (ISM) index. Although the relations are generally weak, some
associations can be discerned, such as statistically signi cant anticorrelation between PBLH
and ENSO for the dry season as well as detrended PBLH and detrended ISM for the summer
mean.
Degree
Student essay
Collections
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Date
2020-09-09Author
Slättberg, Nils
Series/Report no.
B
1114
Language
eng