Publication | Open Access
Organization and Environmental Properties of Extreme-Rain-Producing Mesoscale Convective Systems
437
Citations
28
References
2005
Year
EngineeringExtreme WeatherWeather ForecastingClimate ModelingUnited StatesEarth SciencePrecipitationPrecipitation ProcessesGeophysicsAtmospheric ScienceApplied MeteorologyHydrometeorologyMeteorologyClimate SciencesOrganizational StructuresMesoscale MeteorologyEnvironmental PropertiesGeographyWeather DisasterRadar Reflectivity DataClimate DynamicsClimatologyMeteorological Forcing
This study examines the radar-indicated structures and other features of extreme rain events in the United States over a 3-yr period. A rainfall event is defined as “extreme” when the 24-h precipitation total at one or more stations surpasses the 50-yr recurrence interval amount for that location. This definition yields 116 such cases from 1999 to 2001 in the area east of the Rocky Mountains, excluding Florida. Two-kilometer national composite radar reflectivity data are then used to examine the structure and evolution of each extreme rain event. Sixty-five percent of the total number of events are associated with mesoscale convective systems (MCSs). While a wide variety of organizational structures (as indicated by radar reflectivity data) are seen among the MCS cases, two patterns of organization are observed most frequently. The first type has a line, often oriented east–west, with “training” convective elements. It also has a region of adjoining stratiform rain that is displaced to the north of the line. The second type has a back-building or quasi-stationary area of convection that produces a region of stratiform rain downstream. Surface observations and composite analysis of Rapid Update Cycle Version 2 (RUC-2) model data reveal that training line/adjoining stratiform (TL/AS) systems typically form in a very moist, unstable environment on the cool side of a preexisting slow-moving surface boundary. On the other hand, back-building/quasi-stationary (BB) MCSs are more dependent on mesoscale and storm-scale processes, particularly lifting provided by storm-generated cold pools, than on preexisting synoptic boundaries.
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