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Convective Precipitation Efficiency Observed in the Tropics
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Citations
41
References
2019
Year
EngineeringClimate ModelingPrecipitation EfficiencyEarth SciencePrecipitationPrecipitation ProcessesAtmospheric ScienceMeteorological MeasurementApplied MeteorologyClimate ChangeHydrometeorologyMeteorologyGeographyRadiation MeasurementClimatologyPrecipitation RateAtmospheric ConditionMeteorological ForcingCloud Updraft Velocity
Abstract Precipitation efficiency refers to the fraction of condensate in the atmosphere that reaches the surface as precipitation. A high‐quality data set of radar‐estimated precipitation rates and convective scale vertical velocity near Darwin, Australia, is used to construct the first estimate of precipitation efficiency at convective scales for a long record of observations in the tropics. It is found that precipitation efficiency increases with precipitation rate and midtropospheric humidity and decreases with increasing convective available potential energy and surface temperature. Precipitation efficiency is largest under moist monsoonal conditions and smallest during monsoon break periods, which are characterized by a drier free troposphere. However, these differences in efficiency do not translate to differences in the instantaneous precipitation rate across the synoptic regimes because of a compensating change in the net condensation rate. This is driven by variations in cloud updraft velocity, which is larger in drier environments than in moist environments.
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