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Could Developing Frontal Rainfall Influence Warm‐Sector Rainfall?

Hongpei Yang, Yu Du, Zijian Chen, Junying Fang

2024Geophysical Research Letters14 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Abstract Forecasting warm‐sector rainfall (WR) remains a major challenge, primarily due to weak synoptic forcing. Through cloud‐permitting numerical simulations, in addition to direct triggering mechanism from low‐level jets, we identify the important role of gravity waves in a heavy WR event in South China via convective preconditioning. The preconditioning manifests as mid‐level moistening and destabilization with wave‐like variations. This process is driven by fast‐propagating (∼24 m s −1 ) n = 2 waves, associated with lower‐tropospheric ascents and upper‐tropospheric descents. Waves are generated during the evolution of northern frontal rainfall (FR). As FR intensifies, surges in low‐level diabatic cooling mainly resulting from microphysical processes, trigger n = 2 waves, which further precondition the environment along their path. In contrast, a sensitivity experiment involving stably developing FR fails to reproduce the preconditioning process by waves and the subsequent occurrence of WR. Overall, our study illuminates a new pathway through which FR significantly influences WR via gravity waves.

Topics & Concepts

ClimatologyTroposphereDiabaticGravitational waveConvectionGravity waveEnvironmental scienceForcing (mathematics)Equatorial wavesAtmospheric sciencesMeteorologyGeologyPhysicsAdiabatic processGeodesyLatitudeEquatorAstrophysicsThermodynamicsClimate variability and modelsMeteorological Phenomena and SimulationsPrecipitation Measurement and Analysis
Could Developing Frontal Rainfall Influence Warm‐Sector Rainfall? | Litcius