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    Sensitivities of Simulated Convective Storms to Environmental CAPE

    Source: Monthly Weather Review:;2011:;volume( 139 ):;issue: 011::page 3514
    Author:
    Kirkpatrick, Cody
    ,
    McCaul, Eugene W.
    ,
    Cohen, Charles
    DOI: 10.1175/2011MWR3631.1
    Publisher: American Meteorological Society
    Abstract: set of 225 idealized three-dimensional cloud-resolving simulations is used to explore convective storm behavior in environments with various values of CAPE (450, 800, 2000, and 3200 J kg?1). The simulations show that when CAPE = 2000 J kg?1 or greater, numerous combinations of other environmental parameters can support updrafts of at least 10 m s?1 throughout an entire 2-h simulation. At CAPE = 450 J kg?1, it is very difficult to obtain strong storms, although one case featuring a supercell is found. For CAPE = 800 J kg?1, mature storm updraft speeds correlate positively with strong low-level lapse rates and reduced precipitable water. In some cases, updrafts at this CAPE value can reach speeds that rival predictions of parcel theory, but such efficient conversion of CAPE to kinetic energy does not extend to all storms at CAPE = 800 J kg?1, nor to any storms in simulations at lower or higher CAPE. In simulations with CAPE = 2000 or 3200 J kg?1, the strongest time-averaged mature updrafts, while supercellular in character, feature generally less than 60% of the speeds expected from parcel theory, and even the strongest updraft found at CAPE = 450 J kg?1 fails to reach that relative strength. When CAPE = 2000 J kg?1 or more, updrafts benefit from enhanced shear, higher levels of free convection, and reduced precipitable water.Strong low-level shear and a reduced height of the level of free convection correlate closely with low-level storm vertical vorticity when CAPE is at least 2000 J kg?1, consistent with previous findings. However, at CAPE = 800 J kg?1, low-level vorticity shares the same correlations with the environment as updraft strength. With respect to storm precipitation, in simulations initiated with only 30 mm of precipitable water (PW), all of the storms that last for an entire 2-h simulation tend to produce liquid precipitation at roughly similar rates, regardless of their CAPE. In environments where PW is increased to 60 mm, storms tend to produce the most rainfall at CAPE = 2000 J kg?1, with somewhat lesser rainfall rates at lower and higher CAPE. Nevertheless, over the simulation domain, the ground area that receives at least 10 mm of rainfall tends to increase as CAPE increases, owing to a greater number and size of precipitating updrafts in the domain.
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      Sensitivities of Simulated Convective Storms to Environmental CAPE

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    http://yetl.yabesh.ir/yetl1/handle/yetl/4214162
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    contributor authorKirkpatrick, Cody
    contributor authorMcCaul, Eugene W.
    contributor authorCohen, Charles
    date accessioned2017-06-09T16:41:06Z
    date available2017-06-09T16:41:06Z
    date copyright2011/11/01
    date issued2011
    identifier issn0027-0644
    identifier otherams-72187.pdf
    identifier urihttp://onlinelibrary.yabesh.ir/handle/yetl/4214162
    description abstractset of 225 idealized three-dimensional cloud-resolving simulations is used to explore convective storm behavior in environments with various values of CAPE (450, 800, 2000, and 3200 J kg?1). The simulations show that when CAPE = 2000 J kg?1 or greater, numerous combinations of other environmental parameters can support updrafts of at least 10 m s?1 throughout an entire 2-h simulation. At CAPE = 450 J kg?1, it is very difficult to obtain strong storms, although one case featuring a supercell is found. For CAPE = 800 J kg?1, mature storm updraft speeds correlate positively with strong low-level lapse rates and reduced precipitable water. In some cases, updrafts at this CAPE value can reach speeds that rival predictions of parcel theory, but such efficient conversion of CAPE to kinetic energy does not extend to all storms at CAPE = 800 J kg?1, nor to any storms in simulations at lower or higher CAPE. In simulations with CAPE = 2000 or 3200 J kg?1, the strongest time-averaged mature updrafts, while supercellular in character, feature generally less than 60% of the speeds expected from parcel theory, and even the strongest updraft found at CAPE = 450 J kg?1 fails to reach that relative strength. When CAPE = 2000 J kg?1 or more, updrafts benefit from enhanced shear, higher levels of free convection, and reduced precipitable water.Strong low-level shear and a reduced height of the level of free convection correlate closely with low-level storm vertical vorticity when CAPE is at least 2000 J kg?1, consistent with previous findings. However, at CAPE = 800 J kg?1, low-level vorticity shares the same correlations with the environment as updraft strength. With respect to storm precipitation, in simulations initiated with only 30 mm of precipitable water (PW), all of the storms that last for an entire 2-h simulation tend to produce liquid precipitation at roughly similar rates, regardless of their CAPE. In environments where PW is increased to 60 mm, storms tend to produce the most rainfall at CAPE = 2000 J kg?1, with somewhat lesser rainfall rates at lower and higher CAPE. Nevertheless, over the simulation domain, the ground area that receives at least 10 mm of rainfall tends to increase as CAPE increases, owing to a greater number and size of precipitating updrafts in the domain.
    publisherAmerican Meteorological Society
    titleSensitivities of Simulated Convective Storms to Environmental CAPE
    typeJournal Paper
    journal volume139
    journal issue11
    journal titleMonthly Weather Review
    identifier doi10.1175/2011MWR3631.1
    journal fristpage3514
    journal lastpage3532
    treeMonthly Weather Review:;2011:;volume( 139 ):;issue: 011
    contenttypeFulltext
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