Variations in Flash Flood-Producing Storm Characteristics Associated with Changes in Vertical Velocity in a Future Climate in the Mississippi River Basin

Author(s):  
Erin Dougherty ◽  
Kristen L. Rasmussen

AbstractThe Mississippi River Basin (MRB) is a flash flood hotspot receiving the most frequent flash floods and highest average rainfall accumulation of any region in the United States. Given the destruction flash floods cause in the current climate in the MRB, it is critical to understand how they will change in a future, warmer climate in order to prepare for these impacts. Recent work utilizing convection-permitting climate simulations to analyze future precipitation changes in flash flood-producing storms in the United States shows that the MRB experiences the greatest future increase in flash flood rainfall. This result motivates the goal of the present study to better understand the changes to precipitation characteristics and vertical velocity in flash flood-producing storms in the MRB. Specifically, the variations in flash flood-producing storm characteristics related to changes in vertical velocity in the MRB are examined by identifying 484 historical flash flood-producing storms from 2002–2013 and studying how they change in a future climate using 4-km convection-permitting simulations under a pseudo-global warming framework. In a future climate, precipitation and runoff increase by 17% and 32%, respectively, in flash flood-producing storms in the MRB. While rainfall increases in all flash flood-producing storms due to similar increases in moisture, it increases the most in storms with the strongest vertical velocity, suggesting that storm dynamics might modulate future changes in rainfall. These results are necessary to predict and prepare for the multifaceted impacts of climate change on flash flood-producing storms in order to create more resilient communities.

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Erin Dougherty ◽  
Kristen Rasmussen ◽  
Andrew Newman ◽  
Ethan Gutmann

<p>The Mississippi River Basin (MRB) is a flash flood hotspot in the United States, receiving the most frequent floods and highest rainfall accumulations across the country. In a future warmer climate, this region exhibits some of the greatest increases in rainfall associated with storms that produce flash floods. In order to better understand these future changes, convection-permitting simulations of a current and future climate are utilized to study changes to storm dynamics and precipitation in these convectively-driven flash flood-producing storms. </p><p>First, nearly 500 flash flood-producing storms in the MRB are examined under a pseudo-global warming framework to examine the role of vertical velocity in modulating future rainfall changes. Three different categories of storms are designated based on their vertical velocity magnitude in the current climate–weak, moderate, and strong. While all storm categories display an increase in future rainfall accumulation, the amount of increase varies by the storm’s vertical velocity magnitude, which also changes in the future. </p><p>Second, idealized WRF simulations are run based on a composite sounding of the flash flood-producing storms in the MRB that occurred during the warm season. Future temperature, moisture, and horizontal wind perturbations are added to the initial sounding using the CESM Large Ensemble Data Set under the RCP 8.5 emissions scenario. In these idealized simulations, the contribution of different precipitation modes to future changes in rainfall are examined. The relationship between changes in future precipitation mode and storm dynamics provides a better understanding of how storm processes influence future changes in rainfall in a flash flood prone region in the United States. </p><p> </p>


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