Interactions between Moisture and Tropical Convection. Part I: The Coevolution of Moisture and Convection

Author:

Wolding Brandon1,Dias Juliana1,Kiladis George1,Ahmed Fiaz2,Powell Scott W.3,Maloney Eric4,Branson Mark4

Affiliation:

1. Physical Sciences Division, NOAA/Earth System Research Laboratory, Boulder, Colorado

2. Atmospheric and Oceanic Sciences, University of California, Los Angeles, Los Angeles, California

3. Department of Meteorology, Naval Postgraduate School, Monterey, California

4. Department of Atmospheric Science, Colorado State University, Fort Collins, Colorado

Abstract

AbstractRealistically representing the multiscale interactions between moisture and tropical convection remains an ongoing challenge for weather prediction and climate models. In this study, we revisit the relationship between precipitation and column saturation fraction (CSF) by investigating their tendencies in CSF–precipitation space using satellite and radar observations, as well as reanalysis. A well-known, roughly exponential increase in precipitation occurs as CSF increases above a “critical point,” which acts as an attractor in CSF–precipitation space. Each movement away from and subsequent return toward the attractor results in a small net change of the coupled system, causing it to evolve in a cyclical fashion around the attractor. This cyclical evolution is characterized by shallow and convective precipitation progressively moistening the environment and strengthening convection, stratiform precipitation progressively weakening convection, and drying in the nonprecipitating and lightly precipitation regime. This behavior is evident across a range of spatiotemporal scales, suggesting that shortcomings in model representation of the joint evolution of convection and large-scale moisture will negatively impact a broad range of spatiotemporal scales. Novel process-level diagnostics indicate that several models, all implementing versions of the Zhang–McFarlane deep convective parameterization, exhibit unrealistic coupling between column moisture and convection.

Funder

Climate Program Office

National Aeronautics and Space Administration

National Science Foundation

National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration

Publisher

American Meteorological Society

Subject

Atmospheric Science

Reference69 articles.

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