Literature DB >> 32753779

Responses of Tropical Ocean Clouds and Precipitation to the Large-Scale Circulation:Atmospheric-Water-Budget-Related Phase Space and Dynamical Regimes.

Sun Wong1, Anthony D Del Genio2, Tao Wang1, Brian H Kahn1, Eric J Fetzer1, Tristan S L'ecuyer3.   

Abstract

An atmospheric-water-budget-related phase space is constructed with the tendency terms related to dynamical convergence (QCON ≡ -Q∇ · V) and moisture advection (QADV ≡ -V · ∇Q) in the water budget equation. Over the tropical oceans, QCON accounts for large-scale dynamical conditions related to conditional instability, and QADV accounts for conditions related to lower-tropospheric moisture gradient. Two reanalysis products [MERRA and ERA-Interim (ERAi)] are used to calculate QCON and QADV. Using the phase space as a reference frame, the Moderate Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer (MODIS) cloud-top pressure (CTP) and cloud optical depth (COD) are used to evaluate simulated clouds in the GISS-E2 general circulation model. In regimes of divergence over the tropical oceans, moist advection yields frequent high- to midlevel medium-thickness to thick clouds associated with moderate stratiform precipitation, while dry advection yields low-level thin clouds associated with shallow convection with lowered cloud tops. In regimes with convergence, moist and dry advection modulate the relative abundance of high-level thick clouds and low-level thin to medium-thickness clouds. GISS-E2 qualitatively reproduces the cloud property dependence on moisture budget tendencies in regimes of convergence but with larger COD compared to MODIS. Low-level thick clouds in GISS-E2 are the most frequent in regimes of near-zero convergence and moist advection instead of those of large-scale divergence. Compared to the Global Precipitation Climatology Project product, MERRA, ERAi, and GISS-E2 have more rain in regimes with deep convection and less rain in regimes with shallow convection.

Entities:  

Year:  2016        PMID: 32753779      PMCID: PMC7402402          DOI: 10.1175/jcli-d-15-0712.1

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Clim        ISSN: 0894-8755            Impact factor:   5.148


  1 in total

1.  A determination of the cloud feedback from climate variations over the past decade.

Authors:  A E Dessler
Journal:  Science       Date:  2010-12-10       Impact factor: 47.728

  1 in total

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