Tropical continental downdraft characteristics: mesoscale systems versus unorganized convection

Schiro, K. A. and J. D. Neelin
Atmos. Chem. Phys., 18, 1997-2010.
© European Geosciences Union, 2018. Paper (PDF 1.3 MB).

Abstract Downdrafts and cold pool characteristics for strong mesoscale convective systems (MCSs) and isolated, unorganized deep precipitating convection are analyzed using multi-instrument data from the DOE Atmospheric Radiation Measurement (ARM) GoAmazon2014/5 campaign. Increases in column water vapor (CWV) are observed leading convection, with higher CWV preceding MCSs than for isolated cells. For both MCSs and isolated cells, increases in wind speed, decreases in surface moisture and temperature, and increases in relative humidity occur coincidentally with system passages. Composites of vertical velocity data and radar reflectivity from a radar wind profiler show that the downdrafts associated with the sharpest decreases in surface equivalent potential temperature (θe) have a probability of occurrence that increases with decreasing height below the freezing level. Both MCSs and unorganized convection show similar mean downdraft magnitudes and probabilities with height. Mixing computations suggest that, on average, air originating at heights greater than 3 km must undergo substantial mixing, particularly in the case of isolated cells, to match the observed cold pool θe, implying a low typical origin level. Precipitation conditionally averaged on decreases in surface equivalent potential temperature (Δθe) exhibits a strong relationship because the most negative Δθe values are associated with a high probability of precipitation. The more physically motivated conditional average of Δθe on precipitation shows that decreases in e level off with increasing precipitation rate, bounded by the maximum difference between surface Δθe and its minimum in the profile aloft. Robustness of these statistics observed across scales and regions suggests their potential use as model diagnostic tools for the improvement of downdraft parameterizations in climate models.

Citation Schiro, K. A. and Neelin, J. D.: Tropical continental downdraft characteristics: mesoscale systems versus unorganized convection. Atmos. Chem. Phys., 18, 1997-2010, https://doi.org/10.5194/acp-18-1997-2018, 2018.


Acknowledgments. The U.S. Department of Energy Atmospheric Radiation Measurement (ARM) Climate Research Facility GoAmazon2014/5 and Tropical West Pacific field campaign data were essential to this work. This research was supported in part by the Office of Biological and Environmental Research of the U.S. Department of Energy grant DE-SC0011074, National Science Foundation grant AGS-1505198, National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration grant NA14OAR4310274, and a Dissertation Year from the University of California, Los Angeles Fellowship (KS). Parts of this material have been presented at the Fall 2016 meeting of the American Geophysical Union and have formed part of Kathleen Schiro's PhD thesis. We thank Scott Giangrande for providing RWP-derived vertical velocity and for helpful discussions.