TY - JOUR
T1 - Influences of Environmental Relative Humidity and Horizontal Scale of Subcloud Ascent on Deep Convective Initiation
AU - MORRISON, HUGH
AU - PETERS, JOHN M.
AU - CHANDRAKAR, KAMAL KANT
AU - SHERWOOD, STEVEN C.
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2022 American Meteorological Society.
PY - 2022/2
Y1 - 2022/2
N2 - This study examines two factors impacting initiation of moist deep convection: Free-tropospheric environmental relative humidity (fE) and horizontal scale of subcloud ascent (Rsub), the latter exerting a dominant control on cumulus cloud width. A simple theoretical model is used to formulate a "scale selection"hypothesis: That a minimum Rsub is required for moist convection to go deep, and that this minimum scale decreases with increasing fE. Specifically, the ratio of R2 sub to saturation deficit (1 2 fE) must exceed a certain threshold value that depends on cloud-layer environmental lapse rate. Idealized, large-eddy simulations of moist convection forced by horizontally varying surface fluxes show strong sensitivity of maximum cumulus height to both fE and Rsub consistent with the hypothesis. Increasing Rsub by only 300-400 m can lead to a large increase (.5 km) in cloud height. A passive tracer analysis shows that the bulk fractional entrainment rate decreases rapidly with Rsub but depends little on fE. However, buoyancy dilution increases as either Rsub or fE decreases; buoyancy above the level of free convection is rapidly depleted in dry environments when Rsub is small. While deep convective initiation occurs with an increase in relative humidity of the near environment from moistening by earlier convection, the importance of this moisture preconditioning is inconclusive as it is accompanied by an increase in Rsub. Overall, it is concluded that small changes to Rsub driven by external forcing or by convection itself could be a dominant regulator of deep convective initiation.
AB - This study examines two factors impacting initiation of moist deep convection: Free-tropospheric environmental relative humidity (fE) and horizontal scale of subcloud ascent (Rsub), the latter exerting a dominant control on cumulus cloud width. A simple theoretical model is used to formulate a "scale selection"hypothesis: That a minimum Rsub is required for moist convection to go deep, and that this minimum scale decreases with increasing fE. Specifically, the ratio of R2 sub to saturation deficit (1 2 fE) must exceed a certain threshold value that depends on cloud-layer environmental lapse rate. Idealized, large-eddy simulations of moist convection forced by horizontally varying surface fluxes show strong sensitivity of maximum cumulus height to both fE and Rsub consistent with the hypothesis. Increasing Rsub by only 300-400 m can lead to a large increase (.5 km) in cloud height. A passive tracer analysis shows that the bulk fractional entrainment rate decreases rapidly with Rsub but depends little on fE. However, buoyancy dilution increases as either Rsub or fE decreases; buoyancy above the level of free convection is rapidly depleted in dry environments when Rsub is small. While deep convective initiation occurs with an increase in relative humidity of the near environment from moistening by earlier convection, the importance of this moisture preconditioning is inconclusive as it is accompanied by an increase in Rsub. Overall, it is concluded that small changes to Rsub driven by external forcing or by convection itself could be a dominant regulator of deep convective initiation.
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U2 - 10.1175/JAS-D-21-0056.1
DO - 10.1175/JAS-D-21-0056.1
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85126129824
SN - 0022-4928
VL - 79
SP - 337
EP - 359
JO - Journal of the Atmospheric Sciences
JF - Journal of the Atmospheric Sciences
IS - 2
ER -