Heavy convection that occurred over Tulsa, Oklahoma, during the evening and night of 26/27 May 1984 is studied through a series of numerical experiments with a regional forecast model. The nocturnal low-level jet appears to be established mainly by boundary-layer processes and to be significantly amplified by the latent heat of condensation, which increases during the night over the lower Great Plains. The presence of cloud radiative interaction appears to have less impact on the prediction of the low-level jet and nocturnal convection for the present case, but it is important for the timing of the nocturnal precipitation. The regional model underestimates the extreme precipitation rates observed over Tulsa. The possibility that this underestimation is a consequence of insufficient resolution is investigated. In the nested mode, the regional model with a grid size of 50km and the convection model with a grid size of 0.6km produce local rainfall totals on the order of 10cm over time periods on the order of 2 h, in agreement with the heavy observed precipitation. -from Authors
CITATION STYLE
Nicolini, M., Waldron, K. M., & Paegle, J. (1993). Diurnal oscillations of low-level jets, vertical motion, and precipitation: a model case study. Monthly Weather Review, 121(9), 2588–2610. https://doi.org/10.1175/1520-0493(1993)121<2588:DOOLLJ>2.0.CO;2
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