The Mesoscale Convection System of Torrential Rain in Warm Sector over East Side of the Tibet Plateau

Author(s):  
Qingyun Zhao ◽  
Wu Zhang

<p>The northwest China is located at the northeast of the Tibet Plateau, with a broad zone and complex terrain. The torrential rain occurred occasionally in the region. The formation of torrential rain and defensive ability of human beings are different due to the complex terrain. The storms occurred simultaneously with mountain torrents and debris flows, resulting in major casualties and economic losses. Studies have shown that most of the heavy rain occurred in the front of upper trough under the background of warm and wet southwest flow and near the shear line formed by both northerly and southerly at low level. A heavy rain occurred at the east side of the Tibet Plateau is completely different from previous features of heavy rain in the same region. It happened under the control of warm high ridge and south wind flow field in synoptic scale. Heavy precipitation has emerged in the warm region before large scale rain belt arrived. The torrential rain occurred in warm region mostly appeared in south China and rarely in north area. It has the feature of severe convective precipitation with weak disturbance in synoptic scale. The NWP model is capacity-constrained to forecast it.</p><p>A torrential rain in warm sector occurred at east side of Tibet Plateau, with the maximum hourly rainfall of 65mm, along with thunder and lightning. The evolution of mesoscale convective system was analyzed focusing on the development and propagation at by using the data of satellite, CINRAD, automatic weather stations, the conventional observation, and NCEP/NCAR reanalysis data. The results show that, due to the bell-like terrain of the east of Tibet Plateau and the block of Liupanshan mountain, a low-level jet formed as long as 200-300 km on 700 hPa. The low level jet triggered the development of convective cloud band. The forward propagation of Meso-β-scale convective cloud cluster (MCS) was the major cause of Torrential rain. The radar echoes showed obvious characteristics of low center of mass warm cloud precipitation, the zonal distribution in north and south of strong echo monomer greater than 35 dBz, the movement of convective cells with 1time/h along the low-level Jet from south to north. The significant train effect formed zonal torrential rain at east side of Tibet Plateau.</p><p>In the environmental conditions of high temperature and humidity, extreme instability of the atmosphere and a potential for severe convective weather, more attention should be paid to the formation and maintain of southwest low-level Jet. It is significant to the formation and development of the convective system in warm sector. In order to improve the forecast ability of NWP model, it is necessary to investigate the mechanics of the formation of torrential rain in the warm sector.</p><p><strong>Key words</strong>: East side of the Tibet Plateau; Low level Jet; Convective cloud band; Convective cells propagation; Torrential rain in Warm sector</p>

2006 ◽  
Vol 134 (3) ◽  
pp. 874-896 ◽  
Author(s):  
George Tai-Jen Chen ◽  
Chung-Chieh Wang ◽  
Li-Fen Lin

Abstract During 7–8 June 1998, an organized mesoscale convective system (MCS) formed within the mei-yu frontal cloud band and moved northeastward to produce heavy rain over the island of Taiwan. During this period, the section of the mei-yu front east of Taiwan moved northward, most significantly for about 300 km over 12 h. Meanwhile, a low-level jet (LLJ) developed within the environmental southwesterly flow to the south of the mei-yu front and the MCS. Observations revealed that the front retreated as low-level meridional wind components over the postfrontal region shifted from northerly to southerly. Using European Centre for Medium-Range Weather Forecasts (ECMWF) analyses with piecewise potential vorticity (PV) inversion technique and other methods, a diagnostic study was carried out to investigate the northward frontal movement and the formation of the LLJ. Results indicated that diabatic latent heating from the MCS, large enough in scale, generated positive PV and height fall at low levels. The enhanced height gradient induced northwestward-directed ageostrophic winds and the LLJ formed southeast of the MCS through Coriolis torque. The southwesterly flow associated with this diabatic PV perturbation led to rapid retreat of the frontal segment east of Taiwan at a speed of about 25 m s−1, while the movement was dominated by horizontal advection in the present case. During this process of readjustment toward geostrophy, a thermally indirect circulation also appeared over and south of the front, and the LLJ formed within its lower branch at 850 hPa. The enhanced southwesterly winds reached LLJ strength because they were superimposed upon a background monsoon flow at the same direction. To the lee of Taiwan, the topography also played the role in enhancing local wind speed at lower levels and contributed toward the frontal retreat at nearby regions.


2020 ◽  
Vol 148 (10) ◽  
pp. 4083-4099 ◽  
Author(s):  
Evandro M. Anselmo ◽  
Courtney Schumacher ◽  
Luiz A. T. Machado

AbstractWe describe the existence of an Amazonian low-level jet (ALLJ) that can affect the propagation and life cycle of convective systems from the northeast coast of South America into central Amazonia. Horizontal winds from reanalysis were analyzed during March–April–May (MAM) of the two years (2014–15) of the GoAmazon2014/5 field campaign. Convective system tracking was performed using GOES-13 infrared imagery and classified into days with high and weak convective activity. The MAM average winds show a nocturnal enhancement of low-level winds starting near the coast in the early evening and reaching 1600 km inland by late morning. Mean 3-hourly wind speeds maximize at 9–10 m s−1 near 900 hPa, but individual days can have nighttime low-level winds exceeding 12 m s−1. Based on objective low-level wind criteria, the ALLJ is present 10%–40% of the time over the Amazon during MAM depending on the location and time of day. The evolution of the ALLJ across the Amazon impacts the frequency of occurrence of cloud clusters and the intensity of the moisture flux. In addition, the ALLJ is associated with the enhancement of northeasterly flow in the midtroposphere during active convective days, when vertical momentum transport may be occurring in the organized cloud clusters. During the weakly active convective period, the ALLJ is weaker near the coast but stronger across the central Amazon and appears to be linked more directly with the South American low-level jet.


Quaternary ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 4 (2) ◽  
pp. 14
Author(s):  
Zhengchen Li ◽  
Xianyan Wang ◽  
Jef Vandenberghe ◽  
Huayu Lu

The Wufo Basin at the margin of the northeastern Tibet Plateau connects the upstream reaches of the Yellow River with the lowland catchment downstream, and the fluvial terrace sequence in this basin provides crucial clues to understand the evolution history of the Yellow River drainage system in relation to the uplift and outgrowth of the Tibetan Plateau. Using field survey and analysis of Digital Elevation Model/Google Earth imagery, we found at least eight Yellow River terraces in this area. The overlying loess of the highest terrace was dated at 1.2 Ma based on paleomagnetic stratigraphy (two normal and two reversal polarities) and the loess-paleosol sequence (12 loess-paleosol cycles). This terrace shows the connections of drainage parts in and outside the Tibetan Plateau through its NE margin. In addition, we review the previously published data on the Yellow River terraces and ancient large lakes in the basins. Based on our new data and previous researches, we conclude that the modern Yellow River, with headwaters in the Tibet Plateau and debouching in the Bohai Sea, should date from at least 1.2 Ma. Ancient large lakes (such as the Hetao and Sanmen Lakes) developed as exorheic systems and flowed through the modern Yellow River at that time.


Author(s):  
Shui-Xin Zhong ◽  
Wei-Guang Meng ◽  
Fu-You Tian

AbstractThe contributions of divergent and rotational wind components to the kinetic energy budget during a record-breaking rainstorm on 7 May 2017 over South China are examined. This warm-sector extreme precipitation caused historical maximum of 382.6 mm accumulated rainfall in 3 h over the Pearl River Delta (PRD) regions in South China. Results show that there was a high low-level southerly wind-speed tongue stretching into the PRD regions from the northeast of the South China Sea (SCS) during this extreme precipitation. The velocity potential exhibited a low-value center as well as a low-level divergence-center over the SCS. The rotational components of the kinetic energy (KR)-related terms were the main contribution-terms of the kinetic energy budget. The main contribution-terms of KR and the divergent component of kinetic energy (KD) were the barotropical and baroclinic processes-related terms due to cross-contour flow and the vertical flux divergence.


2017 ◽  
Vol 51 (4) ◽  
pp. 1537-1558 ◽  
Author(s):  
James F. Danco ◽  
Elinor R. Martin

Author(s):  
H M Li ◽  
Q L He ◽  
Y X Xiao ◽  
H Y Luo ◽  
H Zhang ◽  
...  

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