"Hot spots" in the climate system : new developments in extratropical ocean-atmosphere interaction research
Author(s)
Bibliographic Information
"Hot spots" in the climate system : new developments in extratropical ocean-atmosphere interaction research
Springer, 2016
- hardback
Available at 6 libraries
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  Nagasaki
  Kumamoto
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  Okinawa
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Note
Previously published in Journal of Oceanography Volume 71, Nunber 5, 2015
Description and Table of Contents
Description
This book consists of the articles from the
special issue of "'Hot Spots' in the Climate System" in the Journal of Oceanography,
Vol. 71 No. 5, 2015, comprising 9 chapters that cover a wide spectrum of
topics. This spinoff book is a collection of papers on the scientific outcomes
of a nationwide 5-year project funded by the Japanese Ministry of Education,
Culture, Sports, Science and Technology (MEXT) and known internationally as the
"Hot-Spot Project." The academic achievement of the project has gained
international recognition, making substantial contribution to unveiling the
climatic role of warm western boundary ocean currents, including the Kuroshio,
and associated oceanic fronts characterized by sharp temperature gradients and
active meso-scale oceanic eddies. Specifically, those warm currents may be
called "hot spots" in the climate system, as they intensively release heat and
moisture to the atmosphere, thereby acting to organize clouds and precipitation
systems and set conditions favorable for recurrent development of storms. This
spinoff is a unique collection of the outcome of the particular project. The
collected papers cover a wide range of aspects of ocean-atmosphere interaction
characteristic of the oceanic fronts and continental marginal seas, unveiled
through observational, theoretical, analytical, and numerical investigations.
Most of the readers of the book are assumed to be researchers and graduate
students who study climate dynamics, physical oceanography, atmospheric
science, and air-sea interaction.
Table of Contents
Oceanic fronts and jets around Japan: a review.- Climatological mean features and interannual to decadal variability of ring formations in the Kuroshio Extension region.- Marine atmospheric boundary layer and low-level cloud responses to the Kuroshio Extension front in the early summer of 2012: three-vessel simultaneous observations and numerical simulations.- Heat and salt budgets of the mixed layer around the Subarctic Front of the North Pacific Ocean.- Impact of downward heat penetration below the shallow seasonal thermocline on the sea surface temperature.- Early summertime interannual variability in surface and subsurface temperature in the North Pacific.- Local wind effect on the Kuroshio path state off the southeastern coast of Kyushu.- Unusually rapid intensification of Typhoon Man-yi in 2013 under pre-existing warm-water conditions near the Kuroshio front south of Japan.- Atlantic-Pacific asymmetry of subsurface temperature change and frontal response of the Antarctic Circumpolar Current for the recent three decades.
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