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Two‐dimensional convection in non‐constant shear: A model of mid‐latitude squall lines

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TLDR
In this paper, numerical simulations of two-dimensional deep convection are analyzed using analytical models extended to include shallow downdraughts and non-constant shear. But the results are placed in context with previous 2D simulations, and the similarity with squall lines in central and eastern U.S.A.
Abstract
Numerical simulations of two-dimensional deep convection are analysed using analytical models extended to include shallow downdraughts and non-constant shear. The cumulonimbus are initiated by low-level convergence created by a finite amplitude downdraught. These experiments have constant low-level shear and differ only in the profile of mid-and upper-level winds. Quasi-steady convenction is produced if the mid- and upper-level flow has small shear and the low-level shear is large. The surface precipitation ismaximized for no intial relative relative flow aloft, if stationary, this storm (P(O)) can give prodigious locilized rainfall; P(O) is the two-dimentisonal equivalent of the supercell. These results are placed in context with previous two-dimensional simulations. Attention is drawn to the similiarity with previous two-dimensional simulations. Attention is drawn to the similarity with squall lines in central and eastern U.S.A. Storm P(O) is analysed by construction of time-averaged fields of streamfunction, vorticity, teperature, and height deviation. The smoothness of these fields suggests a conceptual model of the storm dynamics which involves cooperation between distinct charcteristic flows; an overturning updraught, a jump type updraught, a shallow downdraught, a low-level rotor, and a boundary layer. An idealized analytical model is described by solution of the equations for steady convection. These solutions, for the remote flow, are derived from energy conversation, mass continuity and a momentum budget, and they give relationships between the non-dimensional parameteres of the problem. It is apparent that the convection is a high Froude (or low Richardson) number flow demanding the existence of a cross-storm pressure gradient. Inherent in this idealized model is a vortex sheet between updraught and down-draught and it is considered that the dynamical instability of this sheet is related to complexities in the numerical simulation. Furthermore, these results show that in two-dimensions both non-constant shear and a shallow downdraught are necessary to maintain steady convection.

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Mesoscale convective systems

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Inferences of Predictability Associated with Warm Season Precipitation Episodes

TL;DR: In this paper, a radar-based climatology of warm season precipitation "episodes" is presented, defined as time-space clusters of heavy precipitation that often result from sequences of organized convection such as squall lines, mesoscale convective systems, and mesoscal convective complexes.
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“A Theory for Strong Long-Lived Squall Lines” Revisited

TL;DR: In this paper, the basic interpretations of the RKW theory are reconfirmed and clarified through both the analysis of a simplified two-dimensional vorticity-streamfunction model that allows for a more direct interpretation of the role of the shear in controlling the circulation around the cold pool, and through an extensive set of 3D squall-line simulations, run at higher resolution and covering a larger range of environmental shear conditions than presented by WKR.
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Nowcasting Thunderstorms: A Status Report

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors reviewed the status of forecasting convective precipitation for time periods less than a few hours (nowcasting), and developed techniques for nowcasting thunderstorm location were developed in the 1960s and 1970s by extrapolating radar echoes.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

The dynamics and simulation of tropical cumulonimbus and squall lines

TL;DR: In this article, the authors combine theoretical analysis and numerical simulation to produce a dynamical model of tropical cumulonimbus convection which features a close cooperation between the updraught and downdraught circulations.
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Simulations of Right- and Left-Moving Storms Produced Through Storm Splitting

TL;DR: In this article, self-sustaining right and left-moving storms are simulated which arise through splitting of the original storm, and the right-moving storm develops a structure which bears strong resemblance to Browning's (1964) conceptual model, while the left moving storm has mirror image characteristics.
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Numerical Simulations with a Three-Dimensional Cloud Model: Lateral Boundary Condition Experiments and Multicellular Severe Storm Simulations

TL;DR: In this article, simulations with a three-dimensional numerical cloud model are presented for airflow over a bell-shaped mountain and for a multicellular severe storm, showing that physical modes can be computationally excited using the latter's treatment with the result of very large horizontally averaged vertical velocities.
Journal ArticleDOI

The propagation and transfer properties of steady convective overturning in shear

TL;DR: In this paper, a conservative quantity is found as an integral of a component of the vorticity equation and used to formulate a non-linear theory of steady, two-dimensional convection in shear.
Journal ArticleDOI

Radiation conditions for the lateral boundaries of limited‐area numerical models

TL;DR: In this paper, an analysis is presented of various extrapolation and radiation boundary conditions, involving calculation of their accuracy for waves and more general solutions, and for solutions of the wave equation, it is shown that the radiation condition is third order.
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