When, Where and to What Extent Do Temperature Perturbations Near Tropical Deep Convection Follow Convective Quasi Equilibrium?
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Published:2024-05-30
Issue:11
Volume:51
Page:
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ISSN:0094-8276
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Container-title:Geophysical Research Letters
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language:en
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Short-container-title:Geophysical Research Letters
Author:
Li Yi‐Xian12ORCID,
Masunaga Hirohiko2ORCID,
Takahashi Hanii3ORCID,
Yu Jia‐Yuh1ORCID
Affiliation:
1. Department of Atmospheric Sciences National Central University Taoyuan Taiwan
2. Institute for Space‐Earth Environmental Research Nagoya University Nagoya Japan
3. Jet Propulsion Laboratory California Institute of Technology Pasadena CA USA
Abstract
AbstractConvective Quasi‐Equilibrium (CQE) is often adopted as a useful closure assumption to summarize the effects of unresolved convection on large‐scale thermodynamics, while existing efforts to observationally validate CQE largely rely on specific spatial domains or sites rather than the source of CQE constraints—deep convection. This study employs a Lagrangian framework to investigate leading temperature perturbation patterns near deep convection, of which the centers are located by use of an ensemble of satellite measurements. Temperature perturbations near deep convection with high peak precipitation are rapidly adjusted toward the CQE structure within the [−2, 1] hours centered on peak precipitation. The top 1% precipitating deep convection constrains neighboring free‐tropospheric leading perturbations up to 9°. Notable CQE validity beyond a 1° radius is observed when peak precipitation exceeds the 93rd percentile. These findings suggest that only a small fraction of deep convection with extreme precipitation shapes tropical free‐tropospheric temperature patterns dominantly.
Funder
National Science and Technology Council
Publisher
American Geophysical Union (AGU)