Multiscale characteristics of an extreme precipitation event over Nepal

被引:16
|
作者
Bohlinger, Patrik [1 ,2 ]
Sorteberg, Asgeir [1 ,2 ]
Liu, Changhai [3 ]
Rasmussen, Roy [3 ]
Sodemann, Harald [1 ,2 ]
Ogawa, Fumiaki [1 ,2 ]
机构
[1] Univ Bergen, Geophys Inst, Allegaten 70,Box 7803, N-5020 Bergen, Norway
[2] Bjerknes Ctr Climate Res, Bergen, Norway
[3] UCAR, NCAR, Hydrometeorol Applicat Program, Res Applicat Lab, Boulder, CO USA
关键词
convective system; dynamical downscaling; extreme precipitation; Lagrangian trajectories; moisture sources; Nepal; quasi-geostrophic forcing; South Asian monsoon; FLASH-FLOODING STORM; CONVECTIVE SYSTEMS; MONSOON CONVECTION; HIMALAYAN REGION; SUMMER MONSOON; STEEP EDGE; TERRAIN; TRENDS; MODEL;
D O I
10.1002/qj.3418
中图分类号
P4 [大气科学(气象学)];
学科分类号
0706 ; 070601 ;
摘要
This study focuses on the analysis of the extreme precipitation event in Central Nepal on 19 July 2007 which was part of a sequence of rain events leading to the devastating South Asia flood of 2007. We investigate synoptic-scale conditions using reanalyses and attribute moisture sources with a Lagrangian moisture source diagnostic. Further, we characterize the mesoscale precipitation event with a high-resolution numerical simulation. The simulation reveals an intense wide convective event with a simulated 40 dBZ echo core of considerable horizontal extent (1,550 km(2)) exceeding a height of 12 km. Initially small convective cells were invigorated by high CAPE and a potentially unstable layer at mid-tropospheric levels. This layer reached conditional instability adding latent energy to the system. Isolated convective cells organized upscale into a wide intense convective system, fuelled with moist low-level inflow. The result was torrential rain with over 250 mm within 24 hr. Several synoptic-scale conditions contributed to the intense development: (a) supply of moist air with the help of a typical monsoon break condition flow pattern, (b) anomalously significant moisture sources along this path due to prior precipitation events, (c) an upper-tropospheric trough orienting the atmospheric flow against the Himalayas with associated quasi-geostrophic forcing creating a favourable environment for convection, and (d) destabilized stratification due to an upslope flow. This analysis encompasses multiple scales and shows how a wide intense convective system, not unusual for this region, can be intensified by distinct synoptic constituents.
引用
收藏
页码:179 / 196
页数:18
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