Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Swadhin Behera is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Swadhin Behera.


Journal of Climate | 2005

Paramount Impact of the Indian Ocean Dipole on the East African Short Rains: A CGCM Study

Swadhin Behera; Jing-Jia Luo; Sébastien Masson; Pascale Delecluse; Silvio Gualdi; Antonio Navarra; Toshio Yamagata

Abstract The variability in the East African short rains is investigated using 41-yr data from the observation and 200-yr data from a coupled general circulation model known as the Scale Interaction Experiment-Frontier Research Center for Global Change, version 1 (SINTEX-F1). The model-simulated data provide a scope to understand the climate variability in the region with a better statistical confidence. Most of the variability in the model short rains is linked to the basinwide large-scale coupled mode, that is, the Indian Ocean dipole (IOD) in the tropical Indian Ocean. The analysis of observed data and model results reveals that the influence of the IOD on short rains is overwhelming as compared to that of the El Nino–Southern Oscillation (ENSO); the correlation between ENSO and short rains is insignificant when the IOD influence is excluded. The IOD–short rains relationship does not change significantly in a model experiment in which the ENSO influence is removed by decoupling the ocean and atmosphere...


Journal of Climate | 2006

Climate fluctuations of tropical coupled systems : The role of ocean dynamics

P. Chang; Toshio Yamagata; P. Schopf; Swadhin Behera; J.A. Carton; W. S. Kessler; Gary Meyers; Tangdong Qu; Friedrich Schott; S. R. Shetye; Shang-Ping Xie

The tropical oceans have long been recognized as the most important region for large-scale ocean–atmosphere interactions, giving rise to coupled climate variations on several time scales. During the Tropical Ocean Global Atmosphere (TOGA) decade, the focus of much tropical ocean research was on understanding El Nino–related processes and on development of tropical ocean models capable of simulating and predicting El Nino. These studies led to an appreciation of the vital role the ocean plays in providing the memory for predicting El Nino and thus making seasonal climate prediction feasible. With the end of TOGA and the beginning of Climate Variability and Prediction (CLIVAR), the scope of climate variability and predictability studies has expanded from the tropical Pacific and ENSO-centric basis to the global domain. In this paper the progress that has been made in tropical ocean climate studies during the early years of CLIVAR is discussed. The discussion is divided geographically into three tropical ocean basins with an emphasis on the dynamical processes that are most relevant to the coupling between the atmosphere and oceans. For the tropical Pacific, the continuing effort to improve understanding of large- and small-scale dynamics for the purpose of extending the skill of ENSO prediction is assessed. This paper then goes beyond the time and space scales of El Nino and discusses recent research activities on the fundamental issue of the processes maintaining the tropical thermocline. This includes the study of subtropical cells (STCs) and ventilated thermocline processes, which are potentially important to the understanding of the low-frequency modulation of El Nino. For the tropical Atlantic, the dominant oceanic processes that interact with regional atmospheric feedbacks are examined as well as the remote influence from both the Pacific El Nino and extratropical climate fluctuations giving rise to multiple patterns of variability distinguished by season and location. The potential impact of Atlantic thermohaline circulation on tropical Atlantic variability (TAV) is also discussed. For the tropical Indian Ocean, local and remote mechanisms governing low-frequency sea surface temperature variations are examined. After reviewing the recent rapid progress in the understanding of coupled dynamics in the region, this study focuses on the active role of ocean dynamics in a seasonally locked east–west internal mode of variability, known as the Indian Ocean dipole (IOD). Influences of the IOD on climatic conditions in Asia, Australia, East Africa, and Europe are discussed. While the attempt throughout is to give a comprehensive overview of what is known about the role of the tropical oceans in climate, the fact of the matter is that much remains to be understood and explained. The complex nature of the tropical coupled phenomena and the interaction among them argue strongly for coordinated and sustained observations, as well as additional careful modeling investigations in order to further advance the current understanding of the role of tropical oceans in climate.


Journal of Climate | 2000

Simulation of Interannual SST Variability in the Tropical Indian Ocean

Swadhin Behera; P. S. Salvekar; Toshio Yamagata

Abstract A 2.5-layer thermodynamic ocean model is used to investigate interannual variability in sea surface temperature (SST) of the tropical Indian Ocean. Simulated SST agrees well with the data. Model and observed SSTs exhibit large seasonal and interannual variability in the western and southeastern tropical Indian Ocean. Three processes, namely, latent heat flux, radiative flux, and entrainment, play major roles in the evolution of model SST anomalies. Interannual heat flux is found to have greater influence on the SST anomalies in most parts of the model domain. On the other hand, influence of interannual wind is only pronounced near the coasts in the Arabian Sea during the Asian summer monsoon season and a region in the central part of the southern tropical Indian Ocean (STIO) during boreal winter. Besides the El Nino–Southern Oscillation related basinwide warming, empirical orthogonal function analysis shows a dipole structure in both model and observed SST anomalies in the STIO. The eastern pole ...


Journal of Climate | 2014

Remote Effects of El Niño and Modoki Events on the Austral Summer Precipitation of Southern Africa

J. V. Ratnam; Swadhin Behera; Yukio Masumoto; Toshio Yamagata

AbstractRemote effects modulating the austral summer precipitation over southern Africa during El Nino/El Nino Modoki events are investigated by analyzing the observed events during December–February of the years from 1982/83 to 2010/11. Based on the composite analyses, it is found that southern Africa experiences significantly below normal precipitation during El Nino events compared to El Nino Modoki events. During these latter events, precipitation anomalies are not so significant although southern Africa as a whole receives below normal precipitations. The differences in the spatial distribution of precipitation over southern Africa are seen to be related to the sea surface temperature (SST) anomalies of the equatorial Pacific through atmospheric teleconnections.The low-level (850 hPa) Matsuno–Gill response to anomalously high precipitation over the Pacific during El Nino events results in an anomalous anticyclone extending from the equatorial to the subtropical South Indian Ocean. These anomalous ant...


Climate Dynamics | 2012

Anomalous climatic conditions associated with the El Niño Modoki during boreal winter of 2009

J. V. Ratnam; Swadhin Behera; Yukio Masumoto; Keiko Takahashi; Toshio Yamagata

The winter months from December 2009 to February 2010 witnessed extreme conditions affecting lives of millions of people around the globe. During this winter, the El Niño Modoki in the tropical Pacific was a dominant climatic mode. In this study, exclusive impacts of the El Niño Modoki are evaluated with an Atmospheric General Circulation Model. Sensitivity experiments are conducted by selectively specifying anomalies of the observed sea surface temperature in the tropical Pacific. Observed data are also used in the diagnostics to trace the source of forced Rossby waves. Both the observational results and the model simulated results show that the heating associated with the El Niño Modoki in the central tropical Pacific accounted for most of the anomalous conditions observed over southern parts of North America, Europe and over most countries in the Southern Hemisphere viz. Uruguay. Unlike those, the model-simulated results suggest that the anomalously high precipitation observed over Australia and Florida might be associated with the narrow eastern Pacific heating observed during the season.


Climate Dynamics | 2012

A simple regional coupled model experiment for summer-time climate simulation over southern Africa

J. V. Ratnam; Swadhin Behera; Yukio Masumoto; Keiko Takahashi; Toshio Yamagata

The main aim of this paper is to evaluate the Advanced Research Weather Research and Forecasting (WRF) regional model in simulating the precipitation over southern Africa during austral summer. The model’s ability to reproduce the southern African mean climate and its variability around this mean state was evaluated by using the two-tier approach of specifying sea surface temperature (SST) to WRF and by using the one-tier approach of coupling the WRF with a simple mixed-layer ocean model. The boundary conditions provided by the reanalysis-II data were used for the simulations. Model experiments were conducted for twelve austral summers from DJF1998-99 to DJF2009-10. The experiments using both the two-tier and one-tier approaches simulated the spatial and temporal distributions of the precipitation realistically. However, both experiments simulated negative biases over Mozambique. Furthermore, analysis of the wet and dry spells revealed that the one-tier approach is superior to the two-tier approach. Based on the analysis of the surface temperature and the zonal wind shear it is noted that the simple mixed-layer ocean model coupled to WRF can be effectively used in place of two-tier WRF to simulate the climate of southern Africa. This is an important result because specification of SST at higher temporal resolutions in the subtropics is the most difficult task in the two-tier approach for most regional prediction models. The one-tier approach with the simple mixed-layer model can effectively reduce the complicacy of finding good SST predictions.


Climate Dynamics | 2014

Impact of Mascarene High variability on the East African ‘short rains’

Desmond Manatsa; Yushi Morioka; Swadhin Behera; Caxston H. Matarira; Toshio Yamagata

The interannual variability of East African ‘short rains’ (EASR) and its link with the Mascarene High (MH) variation are explored, using observations and reanalysis data. Correlation and composite analyses for flood and drought events reveal that the EASR variability is strongly linked to the MH zonal displacement, in particular, the zonal movement of the MH eastern ridge. When the MH eastern ridge is anomalously displaced to the west (east) of its normal position, the south east (SE) trade winds over the South Indian Ocean (SIO) anomalously strengthen (weaken). This enhances (reduces) the relatively cool and dry SE trade winds and induces cold (warm) sea surface temperature anomaly in the SIO. As a result, convection over the western equatorial SIO is suppressed (enhanced) and leads to rainfall deficits (excess) over East Africa. Droughts in East Africa are associated with a westward migration of the MH eastern ridge, while the relationship is less clear for flood events and their link to an eastward migration of the MH. Therefore, the zonal migration of the MH eastern ridge provides a novel indicator for the EASR extremes especially droughts. This revelation has immense social application for rainfall forecast over East Africa where rainfall deficits have become more prevalent against the background of deteriorating conventional forecasts for EASR droughts.


Theoretical and Applied Climatology | 2012

Shifts in IOD and their impacts on association with East Africa rainfall

Desmond Manatsa; Barnabas Chipindu; Swadhin Behera

The decadal shift in the relationship between the Indian Ocean Dipole (IOD) and the East African rainfall is investigated using historical observational data. The climate system for equatorial East Africa (EEA) during the October to December (OND) ‘short rains’ season is characterised by spatiotemporal variations of the equatorial East African rainfall (EEAR). Therefore, the EEAR index is derived from the first principal component of the empirical orthogonal function analysis (EOF) of the EEA’s rainfall domain. The IOD, which has been linked with the EEAR in the previous studies, is the main climate mode controlling the tropical Indian Ocean during the OND period. It is usually represented by a dipole mode index based on the zonal gradient of SST anomalies in the tropical Indian Ocean. Therefore the climate modes, IOD and EEAR, are assumed to form a two-node network of subsystems which primarily control the climate of equatorial East Africa during the OND period. The collective behaviour of these climate modes is investigated through the examination of their representative indices for the period 1901 to 2009 using simple statistical techniques. The results suggest that the interaction between these two climate modes, which comprise the network, is not predominantly linear as previously assumed, but is characterised by shifts which are determined by the coupling and synchronisation processes of the tropical systems. In cases where synchronisation is preceded by an abrupt increase in coupling strength between the two subsystems, the established synchronous state is destroyed and a new climate state emerges such as in the years 1961 and 1997. This alteration in the regional climate is accompanied by notable changes in the regional rainfall and IOD variations. But in those events where synchronisation is followed by a sudden loss in coupling strength, the climate state is not disturbed and no shift in the climate of equatorial East Africa is noticed as in 1918. This climate shift mechanism appears to be consistent with the theory of synchronised chaos and is useful for long range predictions of the East African short rains.


Journal of Climate | 2013

Dynamical Downscaling of Austral Summer Climate Forecasts over Southern Africa Using a Regional Coupled Model

J. V. Ratnam; Swadhin Behera; Satyaban B. Ratna; C.J. de W. Rautenbach; Christopher Lennard; Jing-Jia Luo; Yukio Masumoto; Keiko Takahashi; Toshio Yamagata

AbstractThe prediction skill of dynamical downscaling is evaluated for climate forecasts over southern Africa using the Advanced Research Weather Research and Forecasting (WRF) model. As a case study, forecasts for the December–February (DJF) season of 2011/12 are evaluated. Initial and boundary conditions for the WRF model were taken from the seasonal forecasts of the Scale Interaction Experiment-Frontier Research Center for Global Change (SINTEX-F) coupled general circulation model. In addition to sea surface temperature (SST) forecasts generated by nine-member ensemble forecasts of SINTEX-F, the WRF was also configured to use SST generated by a simple mixed layer Price–Weller–Pinkel ocean model coupled to the WRF model. Analysis of the ensemble mean shows that the uncoupled WRF model significantly increases the biases (errors) in precipitation forecasted by SINTEX-F. When coupled to a simple mixed layer ocean model, the WRF model improves the spatial distribution of precipitation over southern Africa t...


Archive | 2016

CURRENT STATUS OF INTRASEASONAL–SEASONAL-TO-INTERANNUAL PREDICTION OF THE INDO-PACIFIC CLIMATE

Jing-Jia Luo; Chaoxia Yuan; Wataru Sasaki; Swadhin Behera; Yukio Masumoto; Toshio Yamagata; June-Yi Lee; Sébastien Masson

Predication skill of the Indo-Pacific climate has been rapidly enhanced in the past decades. While early prediction efforts were made based on statistical methods and/or simple climate models, recent climate predictions have been performed using comprehensive ocean-atmosphere general circulation models (OAGCMs). Both model performance of climate simulation and data assimilation scheme have been improved to produce better prediction skill. Multi-model prediction results have been collected to gain higher skill, which is usually superior to that of individual model. Most of OAGCMs now can skilfully predict Indian Ocean Dipole (IOD) at lead times of up to 1-2 seasons, and ENSO up to 6-9 months. Distinct SST patterns associated with different El Niño flavours can also be well predicted at short-mid lead times. Furthermore, global climate anomalies induced by ENSO and IOD are realistically predicted. The subtropical dipole modes in the South Atlantic and Indian Ocean (IO), the southern African climate, Asian monsoon precipitation, and Northern Hemisphere atmospheric circulation anomalies are predictable at short-mid lead times. Encouragingly, the JAMSTEC SINTEX-F model produces useful skill of ENSO prediction at lead times of up to 2-year. And some strong IOD events can be well predicted up to 1 year ahead even if El Niño’s influence were suppressed. The results also suggest the importance of IO-Pacific inter-basin coupling and recent global warming trend to the climate predictability. For MJO prediction, multi-model ensemble based on 12 OAGCMs achieves useful skill (>0.5) up to 26-28 days in advance.

Collaboration


Dive into the Swadhin Behera's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Toshio Yamagata

Japan Agency for Marine-Earth Science and Technology

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Yukio Masumoto

Japan Agency for Marine-Earth Science and Technology

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

J. V. Ratnam

Japan Agency for Marine-Earth Science and Technology

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Yushi Morioka

Japan Agency for Marine-Earth Science and Technology

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Keiko Takahashi

Japan Agency for Marine-Earth Science and Technology

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Desmond Manatsa

Bindura University of Science Education

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge