Convective response to large-scale forcing in the tropical western Pacific simulated by spCAM5 and CanAM4.3

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Abstract

Changes in the large-scale environment during convective precipitation events in the tropical western Pacific simulated by version 4.3 of the Canadian Atmospheric Model (CanAM4.3) are compared against those simulated by version 5.0 of the super-parameterized Community Atmosphere Model (spCAM5). This is done by compositing sub-hourly output of convective rainfall, convective available potential energy (CAPE), CAPE generation due to largescale forcing in the free troposphere (dCAPELSFT) and nearsurface vertical velocity (!) over the time period May-July 1997. Compared to spCAM5, CanAM4.3 tends to produce more frequent light convective precipitation (< 0:2mmh-1) and underestimates the frequency of extreme convective precipitation (> 2mmh-1). In spCAM5, 5% of convective precipitation events lasted less than 1.5 h and 75% lasted between 1.5 and 3.0 h, while in CanAM4.3 80% of the events lasted less than 1.5 h. Convective precipitation in spCAM5 is found to be a function of dCAPELSFT and the large-scale near-surface ! with variations in ! slightly leading variations in convective precipitation. Convective precipitation in CanAM4.3 does not have the same dependency and instead is found to be a function of CAPE.

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Mitovski, T., Cole, J. N. S., McFarlane, N. A., Von Salzen, K., & Zhang, G. J. (2019). Convective response to large-scale forcing in the tropical western Pacific simulated by spCAM5 and CanAM4.3. Geoscientific Model Development, 12(5), 2107–2117. https://doi.org/10.5194/gmd-12-2107-2019

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