The Robust Relationship Between Extreme Precipitation and Convective Organization in Idealized Numerical Modeling Simulations

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Abstract

The behavior of tropical extreme precipitation under changes in sea surface temperatures (SSTs) is investigated with the Weather Research and Forecasting Model (WRF) in three sets of idealized simulations: small-domain tropical radiative-convective equilibrium (RCE), quasi-global “aquapatch”, and RCE with prescribed mean ascent from the tropical band in the aquapatch. We find that, across the variations introduced including SST, large-scale circulation, domain size, horizontal resolution, and convective parameterization, the change in the degree of convective organization emerges as a robust mechanism affecting extreme precipitation. Higher ratios of change in extreme precipitation to change in mean surface water vapor are associated with increases in the degree of organization, while lower ratios correspond to decreases in the degree of organization. The spread of such changes is much larger in RCE than aquapatch tropics, suggesting that small RCE domains may be unreliable for assessing the temperature-dependence of extreme precipitation or convective organization. When the degree of organization does not change, simulated extreme precipitation scales with surface water vapor. This slightly exceeds Clausius-Clapeyron (CC) scaling, because the near-surface air warms 10–25% faster than the SST in all experiments. Also for simulations analyzed here with convective parameterizations, there is an increasing trend of organization with SST.

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Bao, J., Sherwood, S. C., Colin, M., & Dixit, V. (2017). The Robust Relationship Between Extreme Precipitation and Convective Organization in Idealized Numerical Modeling Simulations. Journal of Advances in Modeling Earth Systems, 9(6), 2291–2303. https://doi.org/10.1002/2017MS001125

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