首页|Evidence of Aggregation Dependence of 5 degrees-Scale Tropical Convective Evolution Using a Gross Moist Stability Framework

Evidence of Aggregation Dependence of 5 degrees-Scale Tropical Convective Evolution Using a Gross Moist Stability Framework

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Spatial aggregation of deep convection and its possible role in larger-scale atmospheric behavior have received growing attention. Here we seek aggregation-correlated statistical properties of convective events in 5 degrees x 5 degrees boxes over the tropical Indian Ocean. Events are identified by box-averaged rainfall exceeding 5 mm day(-1) at the center of a 4-day time window, and aggregation is estimated by an index [simple convective aggregation index (SCAI)] based on contiguous cold cloud areas and their geometrical distances in infrared imagery. A physical framework using gross moist stability (GMS) helps to interpret relationships between aggregation, box-scale ascent profiles, moist static energy budgets, and time evolution both within composite events and on longer time scales. For a given precipitation rate, more-aggregated events (with fewer and larger cloud objects on average) exhibit a drier area mean, greater horizontal gradient of moisture, more bottom-heavy ascent profile, and a greater prevalence of low-altitude cloud tops, especially for lower rain rates. In the GMS budget, this bottom-heavy ascent implies net energy import into the atmospheric column during the 4-day event composite. Consistently, net energy variations filtered to reveal longer time scales do indeed exhibit more-aggregated rain events in their growth phase than in their flat and decaying phases. More-aggregated scenes also have more drying by analysis than less-aggregated scenes in MERRA-2's assimilation budgets. This suggests that parameterized convection (lacking any organization effect) is raining out less water than nature's real, aggregated convection in such scenes.

Deep convectionDynamicsMesoscale systemsMoisturemoisture budgetCLOUD-RESOLVING MODELSTATIC ENERGY BUDGETSELF-AGGREGATIONVERTICAL STRUCTURECOUPLED GRAVITYDEEP CONVECTIONWATER-VAPORPRECIPITATIONSATELLITECLUSTERS

Tsai, Wei-Ming、Mapes, Brian E.

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Univ Miami

2022

Journal of the Atmospheric Sciences

Journal of the Atmospheric Sciences

EISCI
ISSN:0022-4928
年,卷(期):2022.79(5)
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