4.6 Article

The Relationship Between Anomalous Presummer Extreme Rainfall Over South China and Synoptic Disturbances

Journal

JOURNAL OF GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH-ATMOSPHERES
Volume 123, Issue 7, Pages 3395-3413

Publisher

AMER GEOPHYSICAL UNION
DOI: 10.1002/2017JD028106

Keywords

extreme precipitation episodes; synoptic disturbances; south China; presummer rainy season

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [91437104, 41775050]
  2. China Postdoctoral Science Foundation [2016 M601197]
  3. Public Welfare Scientific Research Projects in Meteorology [GYHY201406013]
  4. Basic Research and Operation Funding of the CAMS [2017Z006]

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A spectral analysis of daily rainfall data has been performed to investigate extreme rainfall events in south China during the presummer rainy seasons between 1998 and 2015 (excluding 1999, 2006, 2011, and 2014). The results reveal a dominant frequency mode at the synoptic scale with pronounced positive rainfall anomalies. By analyzing the synoptic-scale bandpass-filtered anomalous circulations, 24 extreme rainfall episodes (defined as those with a daily rainfall amount in the top 5%) are categorized into cyclone (15) and trough (8) types, with the remaining events as an anticyclone type, according to the primary anomalous weather system contributing to each extreme rainfall episode. The 15 cyclone-type episodes are further separated into (11) lower- and (4) upper-tropospheric migratory anomalies. An analysis of their anomalous fields shows that both types could be traced back to the generation of cyclonic anomalies downstream of the Tibetan Plateau, except for two episodes of lower-tropospheric migratory anomalies originating over the South China Sea. However, a lower-tropospheric cyclonic anomaly appears during all phases in the former type, but only in the wettest phase in the latter type, with its peak disturbance occurring immediately beneath an upper-level warm anomaly. The production of extreme rainfall in the trough-type episodes is closely related to a deep trough anomaly extending from an intense cyclonic anomaly over north China, which in turn could be traced back to a midlatitude Rossby wave train passing by the Tibetan Plateau. The results have important implications for understanding the origin, structure, and evolution of synoptic disturbances associated with the presummer extreme rainfall in south China.

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