A Report of the Field Operations and Early Results of the South China Sea Monsoon Experiment (SCSMEX)

K. M. Lau
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Yihui Ding
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Jough-Tai Wang
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Richard Johnson
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Tom Keenan
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Robert Cifelli
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John Gerlach
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Otto Thieleandamp
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Tom Rickenbach
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Si-Chee Tsay
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Po-Hsiung Lin
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The South China Sea Monsoon Experiment (SCSMEX) is an international field experiment with the objective to better understand the key physical processes for the onset and evolution of the summer monsoon over Southeast Asia and southern China aiming at improving monsoon predictions. In this article, a description of the major meteorological observation platforms during the intensive observing periods of SCSMEX is presented. In addition, highlights of early results and discussions of the role of SCSMEX in providing valuable in situ data for calibration of satellite rainfall estimates from the Tropical Rainfall Measuring Mission are provided. Preliminary results indicate that there are distinctive stages in the onset of the South China Sea monsoon including possibly strong influences from extratropical systems as well as from convection over the Indian Ocean and the Bay of Bengal. There is some tantalizing evidence of complex interactions between the supercloud cluster development over the Indian Ocean, advancing southwest monsoon flow over the South China Sea, midlatitude disturbances, and the western Pacific subtropical high, possibly contributing to the disastrous flood of the Yangtze River Basin in China during June 1998.

*Climate and Radiation Branch, NASA GSFC, Greenbelt, Maryland.

+National Climate Center, Beijing, China

#Department of Atmospheric Sciences, National Central University, Chung-Li, Taiwan.

@Department of Atmospheric Sciences, Colorado State University, Fort Collins, Colorado.

&Bureau of Meteorological Research Centre, Melbourne, Victoria, Australia.

**TRMM Office, NASA GSFC, Greenbelt, Maryland.

++NASA Wallops Space Flight Center, Wallops Island, Virginia.

##Department of Atmospheric Sciences, National Taiwan University, Taipei, Taiwan.

Corresponding author address: Dr. K. M. Lau, Climate and Radiation Branch, NASA GSFC, Code 913, Greenbelt, MD 20771. E-mail: lau@climate.gsfc.nasa.gov

The South China Sea Monsoon Experiment (SCSMEX) is an international field experiment with the objective to better understand the key physical processes for the onset and evolution of the summer monsoon over Southeast Asia and southern China aiming at improving monsoon predictions. In this article, a description of the major meteorological observation platforms during the intensive observing periods of SCSMEX is presented. In addition, highlights of early results and discussions of the role of SCSMEX in providing valuable in situ data for calibration of satellite rainfall estimates from the Tropical Rainfall Measuring Mission are provided. Preliminary results indicate that there are distinctive stages in the onset of the South China Sea monsoon including possibly strong influences from extratropical systems as well as from convection over the Indian Ocean and the Bay of Bengal. There is some tantalizing evidence of complex interactions between the supercloud cluster development over the Indian Ocean, advancing southwest monsoon flow over the South China Sea, midlatitude disturbances, and the western Pacific subtropical high, possibly contributing to the disastrous flood of the Yangtze River Basin in China during June 1998.

*Climate and Radiation Branch, NASA GSFC, Greenbelt, Maryland.

+National Climate Center, Beijing, China

#Department of Atmospheric Sciences, National Central University, Chung-Li, Taiwan.

@Department of Atmospheric Sciences, Colorado State University, Fort Collins, Colorado.

&Bureau of Meteorological Research Centre, Melbourne, Victoria, Australia.

**TRMM Office, NASA GSFC, Greenbelt, Maryland.

++NASA Wallops Space Flight Center, Wallops Island, Virginia.

##Department of Atmospheric Sciences, National Taiwan University, Taipei, Taiwan.

Corresponding author address: Dr. K. M. Lau, Climate and Radiation Branch, NASA GSFC, Code 913, Greenbelt, MD 20771. E-mail: lau@climate.gsfc.nasa.gov
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