Abstract
A system with the characteristics of a relatively short-lived squall line in which warm rain processes play a significant role in the production of precipitation is evident. Planetary boundary layer cold-pool production is important in the organization and motion of the system. A trailing stratiform region is evident with a mean updraft-downdraft circulation, but is composed of in situ decaying convective cells. A storm-relative mesoscale cyclonic circulation is also observed within the stratiform cloud. This vortex was maintained by thermodynamically induced midlevel convergence, convectively generated storm-scale circulations, and their interaction with the background monsoon flow. -from Authors
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CITATION STYLE
Keenan, T. D., & Rutledge, S. A. (1993). Mesoscale characteristics of monsoonal convection and associated stratiform precipitation. Monthly Weather Review, 121(2), 352–374. https://doi.org/10.1175/1520-0493(1993)121<0352:MCOMCA>2.0.CO;2
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