4.5 Article

Soil Moisture Impacts on Convective Margins

Journal

JOURNAL OF HYDROMETEOROLOGY
Volume 10, Issue 4, Pages 1026-1039

Publisher

AMER METEOROLOGICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1175/2009JHM1094.1

Keywords

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Funding

  1. National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration [NA08OAR4310882, NA08OAR4310597]
  2. National Science Foundation [ATM-0645200]
  3. J.S. Guggenheim Memorial Foundation

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An idealized prototype for the location of the margins of tropical land region convection zones is extended to incorporate the effects of soil moisture and associated evaporation. The effect of evaporation, integrated over the inflow trajectory into the convection zone, is realized nonlocally where the atmosphere becomes favorable to deep convection. This integrated effect produces hot spots of land surface-atmosphere coupling downstream of soil moisture conditions. Overall, soil moisture increases the variability of the convective margin, although how it does so is nontrivial. In particular, there is an asymmetry in displacements of the convective margin between anomalous inflow and outflow conditions that is absent when soil moisture is not included. Furthermore, the simple cases presented here illustrate how margin sensitivity depends strongly on the interplay of factors, including net top-of-the-atmosphere radiative heating, the statistics of inflow wind, and the convective parameterization.

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