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AsiaPEX: Challenges and Prospects in Asian Precipitation Research

Authors :
Toru Terao
Shinjiro Kanae
Hatsuki Fujinami
Someshwar Das
A. P. Dimri
Subashisa Dutta
Koji Fujita
Azusa Fukushima
Kyung-Ja Ha
Masafumi Hirose
Jinkyu Hong
Hideyuki Kamimera
Rijan Bhakta Kayastha
Masashi Kiguchi
Kazuyoshi Kikuchi
Hyun Mee Kim
Akio Kitoh
Hisayuki Kubota
Weiqiang Ma
Yaoming Ma
Milind Mujumdar
Masato I. Nodzu
Tomonori Sato
Z. Su
Shiori Sugimoto
Hiroshi G. Takahashi
Yuhei Takaya
Shuyu Wang
Kun Yang
Satoru Yokoi
Peter van Oevelen
Jun Matsumoto
Source :
Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society. 104:E884-E908
Publication Year :
2023
Publisher :
American Meteorological Society, 2023.

Abstract

The Asian Precipitation Experiment (AsiaPEX) was initiated in 2019 to understand terrestrial precipitation over diverse hydroclimatological conditions for improved predictions, disaster reduction, and sustainable development across Asia under the framework of the Global Hydroclimatology Panel (GHP)/Global Energy and Water Exchanges (GEWEX). AsiaPEX is the successor to GEWEX Asian Monsoon Experiment (GAME; 1995–2005) and Monsoon Asian Hydro-Atmosphere Scientific Research and Prediction Initiative (MAHASRI; 2006–16). While retaining the key objectives of the aforementioned projects, the scientific targets of AsiaPEX focus on land–atmosphere coupling and improvements to the predictability of the Asian hydroclimatological system. AsiaPEX was designed for both fine-scale hydroclimatological processes occurring at the land surface and the integrated Asian hydroclimatological system characterized by multiscale interactions. We adopt six approaches including observation, process studies, scale interactions, high-resolution hydrological modeling, field campaigns, and climate projection, which bridge gaps in research activities conducted in different regions. Collaboration with mesoscale and global modeling researchers is one of the core methods in AsiaPEX. We review these strategies based on the literature and our initial outcomes. These include the estimation and validation of high-resolution satellite precipitation, investigations of extreme rainfall mechanisms, field campaigns over the Maritime Continent and Tibetan Plateau, areas of significant impact on the entire AsiaPEX region, process studies on diurnal- to interdecadal-scale interactions, and evaluation of the predictabilities of climate models for long-term variabilities. We will conduct integrated observational and modeling initiative, the Asian Monsoon Year (AMY)-II around 2025–28, whose strategies are the subregional observation platforms and integrated global analysis.

Subjects

Subjects :
Atmospheric Science

Details

ISSN :
15200477 and 00030007
Volume :
104
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........f9fa37191c9d28d56eb8d121b8a7f0ea