What is a monsoon?

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What is a monsoon?

#1 Postby Dynamic » Wed Aug 02, 2006 9:49 am

Good morning everyone!

I will appreciate if some one gives me a brief explication on what's a monsoon and how are their effects on the eastern Atlantic tropical waves?

Thanks in advance!

A TROPICAL WAVE IN THE EASTERN ATLANTIC ALONG 35W MOVING WEST 15-20 KT. THIS WAVE IS SUPERIMPOSED UPON A STRONG WEST AFRICAN MONSOONAL FLOW ON THE SOUTH SIDE OF THE ITCZ...WITH SURFACE SOUTHWESTERLIES EXTENDING ALL THE WAY TO 42W. ONLY ISOLATED SHOWERS AND TSTMS EXIST FROM 11-15N BETWEEN 30W-40S. MORE EXTENSIVE SHOWERS AND TSTMS ARE EMBEDDED IN THE MONSOONAL FLOW EQUATORWARD OF 10N...WHICH IS DISCUSSED IN THE ITCZ SECTION.
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#2 Postby canegrl04 » Wed Aug 02, 2006 10:12 am

Monsoonal flow means moisture flow.It happens every July/August in Arizona.I used to live in Colorado and every summer we would get afternoon thunderstorms from the "monsoonal flow". Anyway,thats the only way i can explain it. What it means is that we can expect a train of waves coming off Africa right now
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#3 Postby Dynamic » Wed Aug 02, 2006 10:45 am

canegrl04 wrote:Monsoonal flow means moisture flow.It happens every July/August in Arizona.I used to live in Colorado and every summer we would get afternoon thunderstorms from the "monsoonal flow". Anyway,thats the only way i can explain it. What it means is that we can expect a train of waves coming off Africa right now


Great explanation, that means that with a lot of moisture coming out from Africa the Atlantic waves will have an additional favorable factor for their development? Thank you!
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#4 Postby wxmann_91 » Wed Aug 02, 2006 10:55 am

from the AMS Glossary:

monsoon—(Derived from Arabic mausim, a season.) A name for seasonal winds.
It was first applied to the winds over the Arabian Sea, which blow for six months from northeast and for six months from southwest, but it has been extended to similar winds in other parts of the world. Even in Europe the prevailing west to northwest winds of summer have been called the “European monsoon.” The primary cause is the much greater annual variation of temperature over large land areas compared with neighboring ocean surfaces, causing an excess of pressure over the continents in winter and a deficit in summer, but other factors such as the relief features of the land have a considerable effect. The monsoons are strongest on the southern and eastern sides of Asia, the largest landmass, but monsoons also occur on the coasts of tropical regions wherever the planetary circulation is not strong enough to inhibit them. They have been described in Spain, northern Australia, Africa except the Mediterranean, Texas, and the western coasts of the United States and Chile. In India the term is popularly applied chiefly to the southwest monsoon and, by extension, to the rains which it brings. See brisa, elephanta; compare etesians, meltém.


West African monsoon: http://orca.rsmas.miami.edu/classes/mpo ... nsoon.html
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#5 Postby monsoon » Wed Aug 02, 2006 11:30 am

Here is the excellent NWS site regarding the AZ monsoon

http://www.wrh.noaa.gov/twc/monsoon/dew ... racker.php
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#6 Postby Aslkahuna » Wed Aug 02, 2006 7:54 pm

Incidentally, monsoons can be dry as well as wet as is the NE monsoon in Asia so monsoons have nothing to do with moisture directly-just windflow. There are criteria for a monsoon and nothing in Europe meets them. The AZ monsoon barely does so and mainly because it represents the northward extension of the larger North American Monsoon.

Steve
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