Data from scanning radars, radiosondes, and vertical profilers deployed during three field campaigns are analyzed to study interactions between cloud-scale updrafts associated with initiating deep moist convection and the surrounding environment. Three cases are analyzed in which the radar networks permitted dual-Doppler wind retrievals in clear air preceding and during the onset of surface precipitation. These observations capture the evolution of: i) the mesoscale and boundary layer flow, and ii) low-level updrafts associated with deep moist convection initiation (CI) events yielding sustained or short-lived precipitating storms.
The elimination of convective inhibition did not distinguish between sustained and unsustained CI events, though the vertical distribution of convective available potential energy may have played a role. The clearest signal differentiating the initiation of sustained versus unsustained precipitating deep convection was the depth of the low-level horizontal wind convergence associated with the mesoscale flow feature triggering CI; either a surface air mass boundary or orographic upslope flow. The depth of typical boundary layer thermals relative to the height of the LFC failed to be a consistent indicator of CI potential. Widths of the earliest detectable low-level updrafts associated with sustained precipitating deep convection were ~3-5 km, larger than updrafts associated with typical surrounding boundary layer thermals (~1-3-km wide). It is hypothesized that updrafts of this larger size are important for initiating cells to survive the destructive effects of buoyancy dilution via entrainment.
Published: February 4, 2023
Citation
Marquis J.N., A.C. Varble, P. Robinson, C. Nelson, and K. Friedrich. 2021.Low-level Mesoscale and Cloud-scale Interactions Promoting Deep Convective Initiation.Monthly Weather Review 149, no. 8:2473-2495.PNNL-SA-158181.doi:10.1175/MWR-D-20-0391.1