4.7 Article

Landform controls on low level moisture convergence and the diurnal cycle of warm season orographic rainfall in the Southern Appalachians

Journal

JOURNAL OF HYDROLOGY
Volume 531, Issue -, Pages 475-493

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.jhydrol.2015.10.068

Keywords

Complex terrain; Numerical weather simulations; Precipitation microphysics; Orographic enhancement; Seeder-feeder mechanism

Funding

  1. NSF Graduate Research Program [1106401]
  2. Pratt School of Engineering
  3. NASA [NNX13AH39G]
  4. NSF
  5. NASA [NNX13AH39G, 474143] Funding Source: Federal RePORTER

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The Advanced Weather Research and Forecasting (WRF) model was used to simulate two warm season events representative of reverse orographic enhancement of warm season precipitation in the Southern Appalachians under weak (9-12 July, 2012) and strong (12-16 May, 2014) synoptic forcing conditions. Reverse orographic enhancement refers to significant enhancement of rainfall intensity (up to one order of magnitude) at low elevations in the inner mountain valleys, but not in the ridges. This is manifest in significant increases of radar reflectivity observations and associated integral quantities (rain rate) at low levels (within 500 m of the surface), as well as changes in the observed microphysical properties of rainfall (raindrop size distribution). Analysis of high-resolution (1.25 km x 1.25 km) WRF simulations shows that the model captures the march of observed rainfall, though not the timing in the case of strong synoptic forcing. For each event, the results show that the space-time variability of rainfall in the inner region is strongly coupled to the development and persistence of organized within-valley low-level moisture convergence that is a necessary precursor to valley fog and low level cloud formation. Microphysical interactions among precipitation from propagating storm systems, and local low-level clouds and fog promote coalescence efficiency through the seederfeeder mechanism leading to significant enhancement of rainfall intensity near the ground as shown by Wilson and Barros (2014). The simulations support the hypothesis that ridge-valley precipitation gradients, and in particular the reverse orographic enhancement effects in inner mountain valleys, are linked to horizontal heterogeneity in the vertical structure of low level clouds and precipitation promoted through landform controls on moisture convergence. (C) 2015 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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