Abstract
Abstract. We investigate how the intensity and spatial distribution of precipitation
vary around Lake Malawi on a diurnal timescale, which can be valuable
information for water resource management in tropical south-eastern African
nations. Using a state-of-the-art satellite product and regional atmospheric
model, the well-defined diurnal cycle is detected around Lake Malawi with
harmonic and principle component analyses: the precipitation is intense
during midnight to morning over Lake Malawi and the precipitation peaks in
the daytime over the surrounding area. This diurnal cycle in the
precipitation around the lake is associated with the lake–land breeze
circulation. Comparisons between the benchmark simulation and an idealized
simulation in which Lake Malawi is removed reveal that the diurnal
variations in precipitation are substantially amplified by the presence of
Lake Malawi. This is most evident over the lake and surrounding coastal
regions. Lake Malawi also enhances the lake–land breeze circulation; the
nocturnal lakeward land breeze generates surface convergence effectively and
precipitation intensifies over the lake. Conversely, the daytime landward
lake breeze generates the intense divergence over the lake and precipitation
is strongly depressed over the lake. The lake–land breeze and the background
vapour enriched by Lake Malawi drive primarily a diurnal variation in the
surface moisture flux divergence/convergence over the lake and surrounding
area which contributes to the diurnal cycle of precipitation in this region.
Funder
European Research Council
Subject
General Earth and Planetary Sciences,General Engineering,General Environmental Science
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