The Influence of Convective Aggregation on the Stable Isotopic Composition of Water Vapor

Author:

Galewsky Joseph1ORCID,Schneider Matthias2,Diekmann Christopher23,Semie Addisu45ORCID,Bony Sandrine5,Risi Camille5,Emanuel Kerry6,Brogniez Helene7ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Earth and Planetary Sciences University of New Mexico Albuquerque NM USA

2. Institute of Meteorology and Climate Research (IMK‐ASF) Karlsruhe Institute of Technology Karlsruhe Germany

3. Now at Software Solutions Department Telespazio Germany GmbH Darmstadt Germany

4. Computational Data Science Program Addis Ababa University Addis Ababa Ethiopia

5. LMD/IPSL Sorbonne University CNRS Paris France

6. Lorenz Center Massachusetts Institute of Technology Cambridge MA USA

7. Laboratoire Atmosphères Milieux, Observations Spatiales (LATMOS/IPSL, UVSQ Université Paris‐Saclay, Sorbonne Université, CNRS) Guyancourt France

Abstract

AbstractRemote sensing datasets of water vapor isotopic composition are used along with objective measures of convective aggregation to better understand the impact of convective aggregation on the atmospheric hydrologic cycle in the global tropics (30°N to 30°S) for the period 2015–2020. When convection is unaggregated, vertical velocity profiles are top‐heavy, mixing ratios increase and water vapor δD decreases as the mean precipitation rate increases, consistent with partial hydrometeor evaporation below anvils into a relatively humid atmospheric column. Aggregated convection is associated with bottom‐heavy vertical velocity profiles and a positive correlation between mixing ratio and δD, a result that is consistent with isotopic enrichment from detrainment of shallow convection near the observation level. Intermediate degrees of aggregation do not display significant variation in δD with mixing ratio or precipitation rate. Convective aggregation provides a useful paradigm for understanding the relationships between mixing ratio and isotopic composition across a range of convective settings. The results presented here may have utility for a variety of applications including the interpretation of paleoclimate archives and the evaluation of numerical simulations of convection.

Funder

National Science Foundation

HORIZON EUROPE European Research Council

FP7 Ideas: European Research Council

Publisher

American Geophysical Union (AGU)

Subject

General Earth and Planetary Sciences

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