Three-dimensional convective-scale simulations of an African squall line, observed during the French COPT 81 experiment, are presented. The convective region (30km wide) appears as the superposition of several convective cells at different stages of their life cycle. New elements are formed in front of the system and are fed by the forced convergence band along the squall-line front. Mature cells produce precipitation that feeds downdrafts by loading and evaporation. Old convective cells dissipate at the simulated system rear. Between the convective updrafts, intrusions of low equivalent potential temperature (θe) are found. These are unsaturated downdraft cells feeding the gravity current. At low levels (up to 2km), the simulated system has a two-dimensional structure, but it becomes progressively three-dimensional with height. This three-dimensional structure allows the crossing of two inflow layers of high and low θe, respectively between 2 and 6km. This is the crossover zone whose existence was hypothesized by Zipser. A detailed description of the gravity current at small scale is given, showing an inner circulation whose intensity depends on the forcing imposed by the stratiform part. -from Authors
CITATION STYLE
Redelsperger, J. L., & Lafore, J. P. (1988). A three-dimensional simulation of a tropical squall line: convective organization and thermodynamic vertical transport. Journal of the Atmospheric Sciences, 45(8), 1334–1356. https://doi.org/10.1175/1520-0469(1988)045<1334:ATDSOA>2.0.CO;2
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