4.4 Article

Case Study of Moisture and Heat Budgets within Atmospheric Rivers

Journal

MONTHLY WEATHER REVIEW
Volume 143, Issue 10, Pages 4145-4162

Publisher

AMER METEOROLOGICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1175/MWR-D-15-0006.1

Keywords

Budgets; Cloud radiative effects; Heating; Moisture; moisture budget

Funding

  1. China Scholarship Council scholarship
  2. NSF [CMMI-1031958, CMMI-0826119]

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This work studies moisture and heat budgets within two atmospheric rivers (ARs) that made landfall on the west coast of North America during January 2009. Three-dimensional kinematic and thermodynamic fields were constructed using ECMWF Year of Tropical Convection data and global gridded precipitation datasets. Differences between the two ARs are observed, even though both had embedded precipitating convective organizations of the same spatial scale. AR1 extended from 20 degrees to 50 degrees N in an almost west-east orientation. It had excessive warm and moist near-surface conditions. Its precipitating systems were mainly distributed on the southwest and northeast sides of the AR, and tended to exhibit stratiform-type vertical heat and moisture transports. In contrast, AR2 spanned latitudes between 20 degrees and 60 degrees N in a north-south orientation. It was narrower and shorter than AR1, and was mostly covered by pronounced precipitating systems, dominated by a deep convection type of heating throughout the troposphere. In association with these distinctions, the atmosphere over the northeastern Pacific on average experienced episodic cooling and drying despite the occurrence of AR1, yet underwent heating and drying during AR2, when latent heating was strong. Downward sensible heat flux and weak upward surface latent heat flux were observed particularly in AR1. In addition, cloud radiative forcing (CRF) was very weak in AR1, whereas it was strongly negative in AR2. In short, it is found that the oceanic convection in ARs both impacts the moisture transport of ARs, as well as modifies the heat balance in the midlatitudes through latent heat release, convective heat transport, surface heat fluxes, and CRF.

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