The Role of Large-scale Organisation of Convection for Tropical Weather and Climate

The Role of Large-scale Organisation of Convection for Tropical Weather and Climate

Author: Boon Sze Jackson Tan

Publisher:

Published: 2014

Total Pages: 224

ISBN-13:

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Tropical deep convection is a critical process in the climate system, influencing quantities such as cloud cover, precipitation and circulation. Despite its importance, convection is poorly represented in global climate models (GCMs). This shortcoming manifests through significant model biases such as in tropical clouds, precipitation and variability on various time scales, and limits our ability to make accurate projections such as changes in rainfall patterns in a warming climate. Due to the coarse resolution of GCMs, convection has to be represented through parametrisation schemes, in which the subgrid-scale behaviour of convection is determined through the resolved large-scale variables. However, our understanding of the relationship between large-scale variables and convection of different degrees of organisation is limited.In this thesis, we investigate the properties and organisation of tropical convection using cloud regimes, with the aim of improving the representation of convection in models. These cloud regimes are derived from the International Satellite Cloud Climatology Project and they identify various states of convection at a resolution comparable to a GCM. These states range from convectively-suppressed environments to a convectively-active atmosphere of congestus clouds and one with cirrus clouds to, most importantly, a regime of organised deep convection.Using these cloud regimes as proxies for different states of convection, we examine its relationship to large-scale variables. Compositing the cloud regimes with traditional measures of convection, we ascertain that they indeed represent different states of convection. Relating them to large-scale variables, we discover that the environments of different convective states are statistically distinct but possess considerable overlap, a result consistent with the stochastic nature of the relationship between convection and large-scale variables. This motivates us to use our knowledge of this relationship to investigate convective organisation in statistical models of varying complexity. After extending the resolution of the regimes from one day to three hours through an innovative technique, we model them statistically using its large-scale environment and infer that a stochastic parametrisation scheme that ignores spatial and temporal memory may struggle to reproduce deep convection organised beyond the grid box and time step. This outcome is worrying because an analysis of the time-series of these regimes suggests that organised deep convection has increased in the past twenty-seven years, driving a corresponding change in the spatial trends of precipitation. Therefore, advancing our understanding of deep convection and addressing deficiencies in its representation in GCMs are of paramount importance.


An Introduction to Large-Scale Tropical Meteorology

An Introduction to Large-Scale Tropical Meteorology

Author: Vasubandhu Misra

Publisher: Springer Nature

Published: 2023-05-12

Total Pages: 315

ISBN-13: 3031128877

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This upper-undergraduate/graduate-level textbook introduces students to large-scale tropical climate circulation and its variations, covering their fundamental aspects and our current understanding of how they are impacted in a warming world. From this volume, readers will gain an understanding of tropical climate variability from the meso- to planetary scale. Uniquely, equal emphasis is placed on atmospheric and oceanic processes of tropical phenomena. The book will appeal to senior undergraduate and graduate students across geoscience disciplines, including in meteorology, oceanography, geography, hydrology, and environmental science.


A Phase Plane-based Perspective of Energetics of Large Scale Tropical Convection

A Phase Plane-based Perspective of Energetics of Large Scale Tropical Convection

Author: Vijit Maithel

Publisher:

Published: 2023

Total Pages: 0

ISBN-13:

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Moisture plays a key role in governing rainfall and convective variability across multiple spatiotemporal scales in the tropics. However, climate models fail to represent such variability realistically. This calls for a need for more process-oriented diagnostics that can help identify the different characteristics and patterns of moisture-driven convective variability. This dissertation contributes towards that task by proposing novel physics motivated diagnostics and establishing the scope of their use by applying these to different observational and reanalysis datasets. The proposed diagnostics provide a phase plane-based approach to understanding the evolution of moisture and moist static energy in the tropics. The results highlight the cyclic nature of the variability. Moisture and rainfall are found to increase and decrease together periodically. More interestingly, we find that a mean composite cycle has similar characteristics and time periods across different regions in the tropics despite differences in the observed dominant wave modes. They are also found to be driven primarily by the advection of moisture by the convective circulation in all the different regions. This indicates that such cycles are fundamental to how convection evolves in the tropics. We further show that the phase plane-based framework can also be applied to study characteristics of individual events as well as other known wave modes and not just the mean composite behavior. By modifying our phase plane analysis to look at the evolution of moist static energy variance, we show that such cyclic evolution can also be interpreted as a signal of convective aggregation. Overall, this study highlights the importance of simple physics-based metrics in simplifying some of the complex interactions between convection, large-scale circulation, and moisture. The phase plane-based framework presented in this work provides a convenient way to visualize important characteristics of convective evolution and is easy to implement for different types of gridded data. This motivates further study of climate model output using these simpler metrics to identify model errors and biases.


The Representation of Cumulus Convection in Numerical Models

The Representation of Cumulus Convection in Numerical Models

Author: Kerry Emanuel

Publisher: Springer

Published: 2015-03-30

Total Pages: 242

ISBN-13: 1935704133

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This book presents descriptions of numerical models for testing cumulus in cloud fields. It is divided into six parts. Part I provides an overview of the problem, including descriptions of cumulus clouds and the effects of ensembles of cumulus clouds on mass, momentum, and vorticity distributions. A review of closure assumptions is also provided. A review of "classical" convection schemes in widespread use is provided in Part II. The special problems associated with the representation of convection in mesoscale models are discussed in Part III, along with descriptions of some of the commonly used mesoscale schemes. Part IV covers some of the problems associated with the representation of convection in climate models, while the parameterization of slantwise convection is the subject of Part V.


Attribution of Extreme Weather Events in the Context of Climate Change

Attribution of Extreme Weather Events in the Context of Climate Change

Author: National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine

Publisher: National Academies Press

Published: 2016-07-28

Total Pages: 187

ISBN-13: 0309380979

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As climate has warmed over recent years, a new pattern of more frequent and more intense weather events has unfolded across the globe. Climate models simulate such changes in extreme events, and some of the reasons for the changes are well understood. Warming increases the likelihood of extremely hot days and nights, favors increased atmospheric moisture that may result in more frequent heavy rainfall and snowfall, and leads to evaporation that can exacerbate droughts. Even with evidence of these broad trends, scientists cautioned in the past that individual weather events couldn't be attributed to climate change. Now, with advances in understanding the climate science behind extreme events and the science of extreme event attribution, such blanket statements may not be accurate. The relatively young science of extreme event attribution seeks to tease out the influence of human-cause climate change from other factors, such as natural sources of variability like El Niño, as contributors to individual extreme events. Event attribution can answer questions about how much climate change influenced the probability or intensity of a specific type of weather event. As event attribution capabilities improve, they could help inform choices about assessing and managing risk, and in guiding climate adaptation strategies. This report examines the current state of science of extreme weather attribution, and identifies ways to move the science forward to improve attribution capabilities.


Science of Weather, Climate and Ocean Extremes

Science of Weather, Climate and Ocean Extremes

Author: John E. Hay

Publisher: Elsevier

Published: 2022-11-27

Total Pages: 398

ISBN-13: 0323900771

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Science of Weather, Climate and Ocean Extremes presents an evidence-based view of the most important ways in which the build-up of greenhouse gases in the atmosphere is affecting both our atmosphere and the oceans. The book provides compelling reasons why concerted action is required to slow the rate at which the atmosphere and oceans are changing. It not only covers longer-term changes in extremes and their causes, but also considers the drivers and attribution of extreme events, including relevant methods and techniques. Members of the Royal Meteorological Society are eligible for a 35% discount on all Developments in Weather and Climate Science series titles. See the RMetS member dashboard for the discount code. - Provides an evidence-based understanding of a significant risk to the future performance of human and natural systems - Includes assessments, advice and recommendations of extreme weather and climate events - Features case studies from around the globe to provide further context to the research


Dynamics of the Tropical Atmosphere and Oceans

Dynamics of the Tropical Atmosphere and Oceans

Author: Peter J. Webster

Publisher: John Wiley & Sons

Published: 2020-06-08

Total Pages: 529

ISBN-13: 0470662565

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This book presents a unique and comprehensive view of the fundamental dynamical and thermodynamic principles underlying the large circulations of the coupled ocean-atmosphere system Dynamics of The Tropical Atmosphere and Oceans provides a detailed description of macroscale tropical circulation systems such as the monsoon, the Hadley and Walker Circulations, El Niño, and the tropical ocean warm pool. These macroscale circulations interact with a myriad of higher frequency systems, ranging from convective cloud systems to migrating equatorial waves that attend the low-frequency background flow. Towards understanding and predicting these circulation systems. A comprehensive overview of the dynamics and thermodynamics of large-scale tropical atmosphere and oceans is presented using both a “reductionist” and “holistic” perspectives of the coupled tropical system. The reductionist perspective provides a detailed description of the individual elements of the ocean and atmospheric circulations. The physical nature of each component of the tropical circulation such as the Hadley and Walker circulations, the monsoon, the incursion of extratropical phenomena into the tropics, precipitation distributions, equatorial waves and disturbances described in detail. The holistic perspective provides a physical description of how the collection of the individual components produces the observed tropical weather and climate. How the collective tropical processes determine the tropical circulation and their role in global weather and climate is provided in a series of overlapping theoretical and modelling constructs. The structure of the book follows a graduated framework. Following a detailed description of tropical phenomenology, the reader is introduced to dynamical and thermodynamical constraints that guide the planetary climate and establish a critical role for the tropics. Equatorial wave theory is developed for simple and complex background flows, including the critical role played by moist processes. The manner in which the tropics and the extratropics interact is then described, followed by a discussion of the physics behind the subtropical and near-equatorial precipitation including arid regions. The El Niño phenomena and the monsoon circulations are discussed, including their covariance and predictability. Finally, the changing structure of the tropics is discussed in terms of the extent of the tropical ocean warm pool and its relationship to the intensity of global convection and climate change. Dynamics of the Tropical Atmosphere and Oceans is aimed at advanced undergraduate and early career graduate students. It also serves as an excellent general reference book for scientists interested in tropical circulations and their relationship with the broader climate system.


Analyzing Characteristics of Convection and the Relationship with Its Environment

Analyzing Characteristics of Convection and the Relationship with Its Environment

Author: Si Won Song

Publisher:

Published: 2015

Total Pages:

ISBN-13:

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Interactions between atmospheric deep vertical convection and larger-scale flow have been examined in three diverse modeling frameworks: a traditional climate model with cumulus parameterization scheme, an extremely computation intensive global convective-resolving model, and a simplified global primitive equation model with a linearized anomaly convective scheme. The first model is operational but has some chronic problems that call for more research, the second is promising but produces vast amounts of output data that are hard to interpret or even handle, and the third is satisfying for interpretation of the interaction processes, but illustrate some continuing challenges of atmospheric modeling, ultimately because this important process occurs in convective cells much smaller than the size of our planet. More specifically, in chapter 2, hindcast bias growth in the Climate Forecast System (CFS) is analyzed. Errors in the Cold Tongue -- Intertropical convergence Complex (CTIC) are apparently initiated by the convection, since they appear very rapidly. The errors are interpreted as indicating weak sensitivity of the convection scheme to moisture, a common problem in climate models. This initial convective error apparently seems coupled feedback processes which gradually spread bias errors to other regions and components of the CFS. In chapter 3, explicitly simulated tropical convective rain events were examined, from a pioneering global nonhydrostatic 5-km mesh model (NASA GEOS-5). The data examined are like perfect observations -- they are samples at full resolution -- but unlike observations the values are know exactly. Composite profiles of larger-scale temperature and humidity evolution across the rain events show good agreement with published composites of observations, but not every case has all the composite characteristics. Diverse interaction mechanisms between convection and its environment are seen in the various cases, as in nature, indicating the model's realism in that broad sense. In chapter 4, a linear matrix formalism for convection-large scale state interaction is explored. Heating and moistening rate anomalies are cast as weighted sums of temperature and moisture anomalies, based on pioneering work of a collaborator, Dr. Z. Kuang of Harvard. His matrix M is tested as a diagnostic model to help interpret the composite data from chapter 3. The composite humidity anomalies are found to be more consequential than temperature in shaping the evolution of convection, based on M's weighting factors. The static stability implied by composite-averaged cool air at the surface, which is a consequence rather than cause of heavy rain, reduces the M-predicted rainrate, indicating one of the challenges of framing causality in terms of large-scale variables alone. In chapter 5, M is applied as an anomaly convection scheme in a global primitive equation model. Five experiments are described with modified versions of M. The modifications are motivated by a wish to understand the roles of M's eigenmodes, and on the hypothesis from chapter 2 that free tropospheric moisture sensitivity is an important aspect of convection schemes. The experiments show substantial differences in large-scale M-coupled phenomena, although these first-ever model simulations are too unrealistic to judge in terms of observations. Several general conclusions emerge. Clearly the treatment of convection is important to large-scale climate and weather, especially in the tropics. Explicitly resolving cloud systems appears to be a promising approach as computation power grows, but will not be affordable for all climate problems. Still, output datasets from such models can be a useful resources for trying to improve parameterizations through better understanding of interaction processes as played out in the range of weather scenarios that occur in the tropics. Based on the linearized matrix approach, some clean interpretations can be deduced. For example, moisture sensitivity of convection does indeed appear to be a key issue for convection interactions, and having a new model where the sensitivity can be cleanly modified and tested could lead to knowledge that may feed back into improvements in conventional cumulus parameterizations.


Climate Dynamics

Climate Dynamics

Author: De-Zheng Sun

Publisher: John Wiley & Sons

Published: 2013-05-02

Total Pages: 545

ISBN-13: 1118671694

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Published by the American Geophysical Union as part of the Geophysical Monograph Series, Volume 189. Climate Dynamics: Why Does Climate Vary? presents the major climate phenomena within the climate system to underscore the potency of dynamics in giving rise to climate change and variability. These phenomena include deep convection over the Indo-Pacific warm pool and its planetary-scale organization: the Madden-Julian Oscillation, the monsoons, the El Niño-Southern Oscillation, the Pacific Decadal Oscillation, and the low-frequency variability of extratropical circulations. The volume also has a chapter focusing on the discussion of the causes of the recent melting of Arctic sea ice and a chapter devoted to the discussion of the causes of recent changes in the frequency and intensity of tropical cyclones. On each topic, the basic material of climate dynamics is covered to aid the understanding of the forefront research, making the volume accessible to a broad spectrum of readers. The volume highlights include Diabatic and nonlinear aspects of the El Niño-Southern Oscillation Causes of sea ice melting in the Arctic Impact of global warming on tropical cyclone activity Origins of the Pacific Decadal Oscillation Causes of climate variability of Asian monsoons The volume will be of particular interest to graduate students and young researchers in atmospheric and oceanic sciences and related disciplines such as geology and geography. The book will also be a good read for those who have a more general interest in the Earth's climate and why it varies.