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Journal ArticleDOI

The evolution of the tropical western Pacific atmosphere-ocean system following the arrival of a dry intrusion

TLDR
In this paper, the authors used TOGA COARE data to study the effect of dry air on the recovery of tropical tropical air from middle-latitude waves, and they found that the time it takes for the atmosphere to recover to moist conditions was ∼ 10-20 days.
Abstract
Recent studies using TOGA COARE data have found that extremely dry air from middle-latitude waves frequently intrudes into the equatorial troposphere over the western Pacific. Using sounding data taken during the COARE, the magnitude of the advection of water vapour for one event is calculated, and it is estimated that the lime for the atmosphere to recover to moist conditions was ∼ 10-20 days. From the magnitude of the drying and from the frequency of these events, it is proposed that dry intrusions must be a major contributor to the tropospheric moisture budget over the region during the COARE, making it difficult for the atmosphere to reach a radiative-convective equilibrium, intrusions, instead, can help to recharge the tropical atmosphere by decreasing convective activity and, thus, driving the atmosphere toward unusually large values of convective available potential energy. A variety of atmospheric and oceanic measurements are also used to study the recovery process in detail. A conceptual model is proposed based on this work and previous investigations. As in past studies, the recovery of the atmosphere to moist conditions is accomplished through detrainment from convective clouds that began to form soon after the arrival of the dry air mass and slowly deepen in height as the recovery progresses. Previous investigators concluded that the entrainment of dry air into convective ceils is generally the factor that tends to suppress convective activity and limits the height of any convection that does develop under these adverse conditions. The idea that entrainment limits convective activity is consistent with the commonly held perception that the western Pacific is a region where there is little inhibition to deep convection and, when inhibition does occur, it can be removed by surface fluxes within hours. In contrast, it is found that convective inhibition can be large enough to suppress convection following dry intrusions, and that the diurnal variation in rainfall is due partly to modulations in convective inhibition. The modulations in convective inhibition are, in turn, caused by diurnal variations in the vertical profiles of radiation, in surface fluxes, and perhaps in large-scale subsidence, leading to a minimum in convective inhibition during the late afternoon. In contrast, studies of this type of convection have generally emphasized diurnal variations in the surface fluxes, and often ignored convective inhibition and diurnal variations in atmospheric radiative heating.

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Citations
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The CloudSat mission and the A-train: a new dimension of space-based observations of clouds and precipitation

TL;DR: CloudSat as discussed by the authors is a satellite experiment designed to measure the vertical structure of clouds from space, and once launched, CloudSat will orbit in formation as part of a constellation of satellites (the A-Train) that includes NASA's Aqua and Aura satellites, a NASA-CNES lidar satellite (CALIPSO), and a CNES satellite carrying a polarimeter (PARASOL).
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Moisture Vertical Structure, Column Water Vapor, and Tropical Deep Convection

TL;DR: In this paper, the vertical structure of the relationship between water vapor and precipitation is analyzed in 5 yr of radiosonde and precipitation gauge data from the Nauru Atmospheric Radiation Measurement (ARM) site.
Journal ArticleDOI

Tropospheric water vapor, convection, and climate

TL;DR: In this article, a theory appears to be in place to predict humidity in the free troposphere if winds are known at large scales, providing a crucial link between small-scale behavior and large-scale mass and energy constraints.
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Critical phenomena in atmospheric precipitation

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors argue that a critical value of water vapour (the tuning parameter) marks a non-equilibrium continuous phase transition to a regime of strong atmospheric convection and precipitation, with correlated regions on scales of tens to hundreds of kilometres.
Journal ArticleDOI

Organization of Tropical Convection in Low Vertical Wind Shears: The Role of Water Vapor

TL;DR: In this article, a modeling study is conducted to gain insight into the factors that control the intensity and organization of tropical convection, and in particular to examine if organization occurs in the absence of factors such as vertical wind shear or underlying sea surface temperature (SST) gradient.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Bulk parameterization of air‐sea fluxes for Tropical Ocean‐Global Atmosphere Coupled‐Ocean Atmosphere Response Experiment

TL;DR: In this article, the authors describe the various physical processes relating near-surface atmospheric and oceanographic bulk variables ; their relationship to the surface fluxes of momentum, sensible heat, and latent heat ; and their expression in a bulk flux algorithm.
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TOGA COARE: The Coupled Ocean-Atmosphere Response Experiment.

TL;DR: In this article, the authors present a simulation of the western Pacific warm pool, the region of the warmest sea surface temperature in the open oceans, which coexists with the largest annual precipitation and latent heat release in the atmosphere.
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The Atmospheric Radiation Measurement (ARM) Program: Programmatic Background and Design of the Cloud and Radiation Test Bed

TL;DR: The Atmospheric Radiation Measurement (ARM) Program, supported by the U.S. Department of Energy, is a major new program of atmospheric measurement and modeling as discussed by the authors.The program is intended to improve the understanding of processes that affect atmospheric radiation and the description of these processes in climate models.
Journal ArticleDOI

Diurnal variation and life‐cycle of deep convective systems over the tropical pacific warm pool

TL;DR: In this paper, the diurnal variations of deep convection in two distinct large-scale flow regimes over the western Pacific warm pool were examined using satellite infrared data and in situ surface measurements from the Tropical Ocean Global Atmosphere Coupled Ocean-Atmosphere Response Experiment (TOGA CORE).
Journal ArticleDOI

Formation of Mesoscale Lines of Pirecipitation: Severe Squall Lines in Oklahoma during the Spring

TL;DR: In this article, four distinct kinds of severe mesoscale convective line development are identified in Oklahoma during the spring based on the analysis of an 11-year period of reflectivity data from the National Severe Storms Laboratory's 10-cm radar in Norman, Oklahoma.
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