4.7 Article

Corrected TOGA COARE sounding humidity data: Impact on diagnosed properties of convection and climate over the warm pool

Journal

JOURNAL OF CLIMATE
Volume 16, Issue 14, Pages 2370-2384

Publisher

AMER METEOROLOGICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1175/2790.1

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This study reports on the humidity corrections in the Tropical Ocean Global Atmosphere ( TOGA) Coupled Ocean-Atmosphere Response Experiment (COARE) upper-air sounding dataset and their impact on diagnosed properties of convection and climate over the warm pool. During COARE, sounding data were collected from 29 sites with Vaisala-manufactured systems and 13 sites with VIZ-manufactured systems. A recent publication has documented the characteristics of the humidity errors at the Vaisala sites and a procedure to correct them. This study extends that work by describing the nature of the VIZ humidity errors and their correction scheme. The corrections, which are largest in lower-tropospheric levels, generally increase the moisture in the Vaisala sondes and decrease it in the VIZ sondes. Use of the corrected humidity data gives a much different perspective on the characteristics of convection during COARE. For example, application of a simple cloud model shows that the peak in convective mass flux shifts from about 8degreesN with the uncorrected data to just south of the equator with corrected data, which agrees better with the diagnosed vertical motion and observed rainfall. Also, with uncorrected data the difference in mean convective available potential energy ( CAPE) between Vaisala and VIZ sites is over 700 J kg(-1); with the correction, both CAPEs are around; 1300 J kg(-1), which is consistent with a generally uniform warm pool SST field. These results suggest that the intensity and location of convection would differ significantly in model simulations with humidity-corrected data, and that the difficulties which the reanalysis products had in reproducing the observed rainfall during COARE may be due to the sonde humidity biases. The humidity-corrected data appear to have a beneficial impact on budget-derived estimates of rainfall and radiative heating rate, such that revised estimates show better agreement with those from independent sources.

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