The Chinese Spring Festival (CSF, also known as
the Chinese New Year or Lunar New Year) is the most important festival in China. Lunar New Year’s Day (LNYD) is
the first day of the Lunar New Year. Traditionally, the CSF
holiday begins a couple of days before LNYD and ends on
lantern day, lasting for approximately 2 weeks. In this paper,
based on the long-term station observations from 1979
to 2012, the precipitation during the holiday over southern
China (108–123 E and 21–33 N, 155 stations) tends to be
lower than that before and after the holiday. The mean precipitation frequency anomaly from the fourth day to the sixth day after LNYD (i.e., days [C4, C6]) decreases by ??7:4 %.
Simultaneously, the daily precipitation amount experiences
a reduction of ??0:62mmday??1 during days [C2, C5]. The
holiday precipitation anomalies are strongly linked to the
anomalies of relative humidity (1RH) and cloud cover. The
station observations of the 1RH show an evident decrease
from day C2 to day C7, and a minimum appears on days
[C4, C6], with a mean of ??3:9 %. The 1RH vertical profile
displays significant drying below approximately 800 hPa.
Between 800 and 1000 hPa, the mean 1RH is ??3:9 %. The
observed station daytime low cloud cover (LCC) evidently
decreases by ??6:1% during days [C4, C6]. Meanwhile, the
ERA-Interim daily LCC also shows a comparable reduction
of ??5:0 %. The anomalous relative humidity is mainly
caused by the decreased water vapor in the lower-middle
troposphere. Evident negative specific humidity anomalies
persist from day ??3 to day C7 in the station observations.
The average specific humidity anomaly for days [C4, C6] is
??0:73 gkg??1. When the precipitation days are excluded, the
anomaly remains significant at ??0:46 gkg??1. A significant
water vapor deficit is observed in the lower troposphere below
700 hPa. Between 800 and 1000 hPa, the mean specific
humidity drops by ??0:70 gkg??1. This drier lower-middle
troposphere is due to anomalous northerly winds, which are
closely related to the cyclonic circulation anomaly over the
northwestern Pacific. The time-lag correlation demonstrates
that approximately 1 week after a lower temperature occurs
over eastern China, a stronger cyclone is observed over the
western Pacific. The possible mechanism needs further clarification through elaborate observation and numerical modeling.
Revised: June 3, 2020 |
Published: November 28, 2018
Citation
Zhang J., D. Gong, R. Mao, J. Yang, Z. Zhang, and Y. Qian. 2018.Anomalous holiday precipitation over southern China.Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics 18, no. 22:16775-16791.PNNL-SA-140996.doi:10.5194/acp-18-16775-2018