Diurnal cycle of precipitation over the tropics and central United States: intercomparison of general circulation models

Author:

Tao Cheng1ORCID,Xie Shaocheng1ORCID,Ma Hsi‐Yen1,Bechtold Peter234ORCID,Cui Zeyu5,Vaillancourt Paul A.6,Van Weverberg Kwinten78,Wang Yi‐Chi9,Wong May10,Yang Jing6,Zhang Guang J.11,Choi In‐Jin12,Tang Shuaiqi13ORCID,Wei Jiangfeng14,Wu Wen‐Ying1,Zhang Meng1,Neelin J. David15,Zeng Xubin16

Affiliation:

1. Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory Livermore California USA

2. European Centre for Medium‐Range Weather Forecasts Reading UK

3. European Centre for Medium‐Range Weather Forecasts Bologna Italy

4. European Centre for Medium‐Range Weather Forecasts Bonn Germany

5. Tsinghua University Beijing China

6. Environment and Climate Change Canada Dorval Québec Canada

7. Department of Geography University of Ghent Ghent Belgium

8. Met Office Exeter UK

9. Research Center for Environmental Changes Academia Sinica Taipei Taiwan

10. National Center for Atmospheric Research Boulder Colorado USA

11. Scripps Institution of Oceanography San Diego California USA

12. Korea Institute of Atmospheric Prediction Systems Seoul South Korea

13. Pacific Northwest National Laboratory Richland Washington USA

14. Nanjing University of Information Science and Technology Nanjing China

15. University of California, Los Angeles Los Angeles California USA

16. University of Arizona Tucson Arizona USA

Abstract

AbstractDiurnal precipitation is a fundamental mode of variability that climate models have difficulty in accurately simulating. Here the diurnal cycle of precipitation (DCP) in participating climate models from the Global Energy and Water Exchanges' DCP project is evaluated over the tropics and central United States. Common model biases such as excessive precipitation over the tropics, too frequent light‐to‐moderate rain, and the failure to capture propagating convection in the central United States still exist. Over the central United States, the issues of too weak rainfall intensity in climate runs is well improved in their hindcast runs with initial conditions from numerical weather prediction analyses. But the improvement is minimal over the central Amazon. Incorporating the role of the large‐scale environment in convective triggering processes helps resolve the phase‐locking issue in many models where precipitation often incorrectly peaks near noon due to maximum insolation over land. Allowing air parcels to be lifted above the boundary layer improves the simulation of nocturnal precipitation which is often associated with the propagation of mesoscale systems. Including convective memory in cumulus parameterizations acts to suppress light‐to‐moderate rain and promote intense rainfall; however, it also weakens the diurnal variability. Simply increasing model resolution (with cumulus parameterizations still used) cannot fully resolve the biases of low‐resolution climate models in DCP. The hierarchy modeling framework from this study is useful for identifying the missing physics in models and testing new development of model convective processes over different convective regimes.

Funder

U.S. Department of Energy

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Atmospheric Science

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