4.7 Article

Extreme changes in stable hydrogen isotopes and precipitation characteristics in a landfalling Pacific storm

Journal

GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH LETTERS
Volume 35, Issue 21, Pages -

Publisher

AMER GEOPHYSICAL UNION
DOI: 10.1029/2008GL035481

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Funding

  1. U.S. Geological Survey National Research Program

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With a new automated precipitation collector we measured a remarkable decrease of 51 parts per thousand in the hydrogen isotope ratio (delta H-2) of precipitation over a 60-minute period during the landfall of an extratropical cyclone along the California coast on 21 March 2005. The rapid drop in delta H-2 occurred as precipitation generation transitioned from a shallow to a much deeper cloud layer, in accord with synoptic-scale ascent and deep ''seeder-feeder'' precipitation. Such unexpected delta H-2 variations can substantially impact widely used isotope-hydrograph methods. From extreme delta H-2 values of -26 and -78 parts per thousand, we calculate precipitation temperatures of 9.7 and -4.2 degrees C using an adiabatic condensation isotope model, in good agreement with temperatures estimated from surface observations and radar data. This model indicates that 60 percent of the moisture was precipitated during ascent as temperature decreased from 15 degrees C at the ocean surface to -4 degrees C above the measurement site.

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