A convection-permitting model for the Lake Victoria Basin: evaluation and insight into the mesoscale versus synoptic atmospheric dynamics

被引:0
|
作者
Jonas Van de Walle
Wim Thiery
Oscar Brousse
Niels Souverijns
Matthias Demuzere
Nicole P. M. van Lipzig
机构
[1] KU Leuven,Department of Earth and Environmental Sciences
[2] Vrije Universiteit Brussel,Department of Hydrology and Hydraulic Engineering
[3] Ruhr University Bochum,Department of Geography
来源
Climate Dynamics | 2020年 / 54卷
关键词
Mesoscale circulation; Regional climate modelling; Convection-permitting; Lake Victoria and Precipitation;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Aiming for an improved understanding of the different factors that determine the regional climate of the Lake Victoria Basin, the COSMO-CLM regional climate model is set up in a tropical, convection-permitting configuration and is directly nested in a recent reanalysis product (ERA5). The convection-permitting simulation outperforms state-of-the-art climate integrations that rely on convection parametrisations. Yet the domain-averaged model precipitation is larger than in the multi-observational ensemble, but the latter shows large spread. Overestimations of outgoing TOA shortwave and longwave radiation are much reduced compared to the COSMO-CLM CORDEX-Africa integration, but still suggest a general underestimation of the cloud fraction or frequency. Comparing the control with a no-lake simulation, the presence of Lake Victoria implies strong intensification of over-lake rainfall, but it only slightly increases the total domain-averaged precipitation. In addition, the easterly trade winds are shown to largely affect the mesoscale circulation and precipitation patterns. During daytime, fast trades and anabatic slope winds trigger convection at the lee-wind slopes, and subsidence over the basin. Slow trades allow the stationary air to produce spontaneous convective cells and to develop anabatic winds that result in orographic precipitation. During night-time, trade winds curl around the eastern branch of the East African Rift, generating a southerly and northerly evening convergence front entering the Lake Victoria Basin. Thus, our results highlight the key importance of the easterly trade winds and the complex orography in determining the total accumulation and location of precipitation in the Lake Victoria region.
引用
收藏
页码:1779 / 1799
页数:20
相关论文
共 47 条
  • [31] An evaluation of tropical cyclone forecast in the Southwest Indian Ocean basin with AROME-Indian Ocean convection-permitting numerical weather predicting system
    Bousquet, Olivier
    Barbary, David
    Bielli, Soline
    Kebir, Selim
    Raynaud, Laure
    Malardel, Sylvie
    Faure, Ghislain
    ATMOSPHERIC SCIENCE LETTERS, 2019,
  • [32] An evaluation of tropical cyclone forecast in the Southwest Indian Ocean basin with AROME-Indian Ocean convection-permitting numerical weather predicting system
    Bousquet, Olivier
    Barbary, David
    Bielli, Soline
    Kebir, Selim
    Raynaud, Laure
    Malardel, Sylvie
    Faure, Ghislain
    ATMOSPHERIC SCIENCE LETTERS, 2020, 21 (03):
  • [33] Evaluation of the near-surface wind field over the Adriatic region: local wind characteristics in the convection-permitting model ensemble
    Vozila, Andreina Belusic
    Belusic, Danijel
    Prtenjak, Maja Telisman
    Guttler, Ivan
    Bastin, Sophie
    Brisson, Erwan
    Demory, Marie-Estelle
    Dobler, Andreas
    Feldmann, Hendrik
    Hodnebrog, Oivind
    Kartsios, Stergios
    Keuler, Klaus
    Lorenz, Torge
    Milovac, Josipa
    Pichelli, Emanuela
    Raffa, Mario
    Soares, Pedro M. M.
    Toelle, Merja H.
    Truhetz, Heimo
    de Vries, Hylke
    Warrach-Sagi, Kirsten
    CLIMATE DYNAMICS, 2024, 62 (06) : 4617 - 4634
  • [34] Predictability of Tropical Cyclone Intensity Evaluated through 5-yr Forecasts with a Convection-Permitting Regional-Scale Model in the Atlantic Basin
    Zhang, Yunji
    Meng, Zhiyong
    Zhang, Fuqing
    Weng, Yonghui
    WEATHER AND FORECASTING, 2014, 29 (04) : 1003 - 1023
  • [35] Evaluation of extreme precipitation in the Yangtze River Delta Region of China using a 1.5 km mesh convection-permitting regional climate model
    Dong, Guangtao
    Jiang, Zhiyu
    Wang, Ya
    Tian, Zhan
    Liu, Junguo
    CLIMATE DYNAMICS, 2022, 59 (7-8) : 2257 - 2273
  • [36] Modelling Mediterranean heavy precipitation events at climate scale: an object-oriented evaluation of the CNRM-AROME convection-permitting regional climate model
    Cécile Caillaud
    Samuel Somot
    Antoinette Alias
    Isabelle Bernard-Bouissières
    Quentin Fumière
    Olivier Laurantin
    Yann Seity
    Véronique Ducrocq
    Climate Dynamics, 2021, 56 : 1717 - 1752
  • [37] Modelling Mediterranean heavy precipitation events at climate scale: an object-oriented evaluation of the CNRM-AROME convection-permitting regional climate model
    Caillaud, Cecile
    Somot, Samuel
    Alias, Antoinette
    Bernard-Bouissieres, Isabelle
    Fumiere, Quentin
    Laurantin, Olivier
    Seity, Yann
    Ducrocq, Veronique
    CLIMATE DYNAMICS, 2021, 56 (5-6) : 1717 - 1752
  • [38] Correction to: Modelling Mediterranean heavy precipitation events at climate scale: an object-oriented evaluation of the CNRM-AROME convection-permitting regional climate model
    Cécile Caillaud
    Samuel Somot
    Antoinette Alias
    Isabelle Bernard-Bouissières
    Quentin Fumière
    Olivier Laurantin
    Yann Seity
    Véronique Ducrocq
    Climate Dynamics, 2022, 58 : 625 - 630
  • [39] An evaluation of dynamical downscaling of Central Plains summer precipitation using a WRF-based regional climate model at a convection-permitting 4km resolution
    Sun, Xuguang
    Xue, Ming
    Brotzge, Jerald
    McPherson, Renee A.
    Hu, Xiao-Ming
    Yang, Xiu-Qun
    JOURNAL OF GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH-ATMOSPHERES, 2016, 121 (23) : 13801 - 13825
  • [40] Evaluation of convection-permitting model simulations of cloud populations associated with the Madden-Julian Oscillation using data collected during the AMIE/DYNAMO field campaign
    Hagos, Samson
    Feng, Zhe
    Burleyson, Casey D.
    Lim, Kyo-Sun Sunny
    Long, Charles N.
    Wu, Di
    Thompson, Greg
    JOURNAL OF GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH-ATMOSPHERES, 2014, 119 (21) : 12052 - 12068