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contributor authorFairman, Jonathan G.
contributor authorSchultz, David M.
contributor authorKirshbaum, Daniel J.
contributor authorGray, Suzanne L.
contributor authorBarrett, Andrew I.
date accessioned2017-06-09T17:17:25Z
date available2017-06-09T17:17:25Z
date issued2017
identifier issn1525-755X
identifier otherams-82486.pdf
identifier urihttp://onlinelibrary.yabesh.ir/handle/yetl/4225605
description abstractclimatology of precipitation features (or objects) from the Great Britain and Ireland radar-derived precipitation mosaic from 2006?2015 is constructed, with features defined as contiguous areas of nonzero precipitation rates. Over the ten years, there are 54,811,747 non-unique precipitating features over 100 km2 in area, with a median precipitation-feature area of 249 km2, median major axis length of 29.2 km, median aspect ratio of 2.0, median feature mean precipitation rate of 0.49 mm h-1, and median feature maximum precipitation rate of 2.4 mm h-1. Small-scale precipitating systems are most common, but larger systems exceeding 10,000 km2 contribute close to 70% of the annual precipitation across the study region. Precipitation feature characteristics are sensitive to changes in annual and diurnal environment, with feature intensities peaking during the afternoon in summer and the largest precipitation features occurring during winter. Precipitation intensities less than 5 mm h-1 comprise 97.3% of all precipitation occurrence and contribute 83.6% of the total precipitation over land. Banded-precipitation features (defined as precipitation features with aspect ratio at least 3:1 and major axis length at least 100 km) comprise 3% of all precipitation features by occurrence, but contribute 23.7% of the total precipitation. Mesoscale banded features (defined as banded-precipitation features with major axis length at least 100 km and total area not exceeding 10,000 km2) and mesoscale convective banded features (defined as banded-precipitation features with at least 100 km2 of precipitation rates exceeding 10 mm h-1) are most prevalent in southwestern England with mesoscale convective banded features contributing up to 2% of precipitation.
publisherAmerican Meteorological Society
titleClimatology of size, shape and intensity of precipitation features over Great Britain and Ireland
typeJournal Paper
journal volume018
journal issue006
journal titleJournal of Hydrometeorology
identifier doi10.1175/JHM-D-16-0222.1
journal fristpage1595
journal lastpage1615
treeJournal of Hydrometeorology:;2017:;Volume( 018 ):;issue: 006
contenttypeFulltext


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