Abstract Global mean and extreme tropical cyclone (TC) precipitation have been increasing over the past few decades and are expected to continue to increase into the future due to climate change. Most projections of future TC precipitation use climate models with grid spacings of 25–100 km, which are too coarse to resolve the convective structures and small‐scale precipitation processes within TCs. This work uses convection‐permitting Weather Research and Forecasting model simulations to investigate how precipitation and precipitation processes change in the inner core (IC) and outer rainbands (OR) of TCs in response to sea surface temperature (SST) warming. The simulations are idealized, with single TCs initialized from weak vortices over domain‐constant SSTs. In these simulations, TC intensity and IC precipitation greatly increase with SST warming while OR precipitation increases slightly. A greater area in the IC is occupied by deep convection more frequently in the warmer simulations, while the deep convective activity remains relatively constant with warming in the TC OR. Mixing ratios of hydrometeors and cloud ice increase with warming in both the IC and OR, while the TCs' vertical circulations deepen, melting levels rise, and mean upward velocities strengthen. This work demonstrates how analysis of three‐dimensional storm structures can provide insight into processes that change TC precipitation in different regions of the storm, and future work will include applying this analysis to more realistic convection‐permitting simulations.
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Kilometer-scale global warming simulations and active sensors reveal changes in tropical deep convection
Abstract Changes in tropical deep convection with global warming are a leading source of uncertainty for future climate projections. A comparison of the responses of active sensor measurements of cloud ice to interannual variability and next-generation global storm-resolving model (also known ask-scale models) simulations to global warming shows similar changes for events with the highest column-integrated ice. The changes reveal that the ice loading decreases outside the most active convection but increases at a rate of several percent per Kelvin surface warming in the most active convection. Disentangling thermodynamic and vertical velocity changes shows that the ice signal is strongly modulated by structural changes of the vertical wind field towards an intensification of strong convective updrafts with warming, suggesting that changes in ice loading are strongly influenced by changes in convective velocities, as well as a path toward extracting information about convective velocities from observations.
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- Award ID(s):
- 1743753
- PAR ID:
- 10544263
- Publisher / Repository:
- Springer Nature
- Date Published:
- Journal Name:
- npj Climate and Atmospheric Science
- Volume:
- 6
- Issue:
- 1
- ISSN:
- 2397-3722
- Format(s):
- Medium: X
- Sponsoring Org:
- National Science Foundation
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