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    Radar Observations of the Diurnally Forced Offshore Convective Lines along the Southeastern Coast of Taiwan

    Source: Monthly Weather Review:;2005:;volume( 133 ):;issue: 006::page 1613
    Author:
    Yu, Cheng-Ku
    ,
    Jou, Ben Jong-Dao
    DOI: 10.1175/MWR2937.1
    Publisher: American Meteorological Society
    Abstract: This study documents offshore convective lines along the southeastern coast of Taiwan, a frequent but poorly understood mesoscale phenomenon that influences coastal weather during the Taiwan mei-yu season. Doppler radar and surface observations were gathered from a specially chosen period (11?15 May 1998) when the offshore convective lines were active off the southeastern coast of Taiwan. These observations were used to show the basic character, structure, and possible formative processes of offshore convective lines. The synoptic environment accompanying these events was found to be relatively undisturbed and featured uniformly prevailing southerly/south-southeasterly winds in the boundary layer with southwesterlies/westerlies aloft. Examination of radar data during the study period indicates that the lines generally occurred ?10?30 km offshore and were characterized by an elongated narrow zone (?5?10 km wide) of heavy precipitation. The lines were oriented roughly parallel to the coastline and generally did not move significantly. The intensity of the radar reflectivity associated with the lines exhibited a marked diurnal variation and was closely related to the coastal offshore flow developing at night. Detailed analyses of an event on 14?15 May 1998 further show the important physical link between the offshore flow and the development of the line. The offshore line was found to be located near and immediately ahead of the seaward extent of the offshore flow. Particularly, a very narrow zone (?2 km) of low-level heavy precipitation (40?45 dBZ) coincided with regions of strong updrafts and convergence, where the prevailing southerly onshore flow encountered the cool offshore flow nearshore. This offshore flow?induced convergence, given a stable thermodynamic condition in the lowest ?1 km in the inflow region, was a crucial low-level forcing that provided lifting to trigger moist deep convection in this case. The line?s precipitation tilt eastward was confined primarily to the warmer inflow side rather than feeding the offshore flow to the west of the line. No consistent upshear tilt of updrafts throughout the storm layer was observed, which is consistent with the presence of a strong westerly shear in the line?s environment. Both of these observations explain a relatively strong (weak) modification of low-level onshore (offshore) flow by precipitation. Additionally, a combination of surface and Doppler radar observations indicates that the leading edge of the offshore flow moved seaward very slowly at 0.7 m?s?1 and possessed a frontal character with notable discontinuities in near-surface wind and temperature (instead of pressure and dewpoint temperature).
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      Radar Observations of the Diurnally Forced Offshore Convective Lines along the Southeastern Coast of Taiwan

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    http://yetl.yabesh.ir/yetl1/handle/yetl/4228936
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    contributor authorYu, Cheng-Ku
    contributor authorJou, Ben Jong-Dao
    date accessioned2017-06-09T17:26:55Z
    date available2017-06-09T17:26:55Z
    date copyright2005/06/01
    date issued2005
    identifier issn0027-0644
    identifier otherams-85484.pdf
    identifier urihttp://onlinelibrary.yabesh.ir/handle/yetl/4228936
    description abstractThis study documents offshore convective lines along the southeastern coast of Taiwan, a frequent but poorly understood mesoscale phenomenon that influences coastal weather during the Taiwan mei-yu season. Doppler radar and surface observations were gathered from a specially chosen period (11?15 May 1998) when the offshore convective lines were active off the southeastern coast of Taiwan. These observations were used to show the basic character, structure, and possible formative processes of offshore convective lines. The synoptic environment accompanying these events was found to be relatively undisturbed and featured uniformly prevailing southerly/south-southeasterly winds in the boundary layer with southwesterlies/westerlies aloft. Examination of radar data during the study period indicates that the lines generally occurred ?10?30 km offshore and were characterized by an elongated narrow zone (?5?10 km wide) of heavy precipitation. The lines were oriented roughly parallel to the coastline and generally did not move significantly. The intensity of the radar reflectivity associated with the lines exhibited a marked diurnal variation and was closely related to the coastal offshore flow developing at night. Detailed analyses of an event on 14?15 May 1998 further show the important physical link between the offshore flow and the development of the line. The offshore line was found to be located near and immediately ahead of the seaward extent of the offshore flow. Particularly, a very narrow zone (?2 km) of low-level heavy precipitation (40?45 dBZ) coincided with regions of strong updrafts and convergence, where the prevailing southerly onshore flow encountered the cool offshore flow nearshore. This offshore flow?induced convergence, given a stable thermodynamic condition in the lowest ?1 km in the inflow region, was a crucial low-level forcing that provided lifting to trigger moist deep convection in this case. The line?s precipitation tilt eastward was confined primarily to the warmer inflow side rather than feeding the offshore flow to the west of the line. No consistent upshear tilt of updrafts throughout the storm layer was observed, which is consistent with the presence of a strong westerly shear in the line?s environment. Both of these observations explain a relatively strong (weak) modification of low-level onshore (offshore) flow by precipitation. Additionally, a combination of surface and Doppler radar observations indicates that the leading edge of the offshore flow moved seaward very slowly at 0.7 m?s?1 and possessed a frontal character with notable discontinuities in near-surface wind and temperature (instead of pressure and dewpoint temperature).
    publisherAmerican Meteorological Society
    titleRadar Observations of the Diurnally Forced Offshore Convective Lines along the Southeastern Coast of Taiwan
    typeJournal Paper
    journal volume133
    journal issue6
    journal titleMonthly Weather Review
    identifier doi10.1175/MWR2937.1
    journal fristpage1613
    journal lastpage1636
    treeMonthly Weather Review:;2005:;volume( 133 ):;issue: 006
    contenttypeFulltext
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