Publication Date:
2006
abstract:
In a recent study, the authors performed numerical simulations of moist nearly neutral flows over a ridge
using the Weather Research and Forecasting (WRF) Model in a regime where the Coriolis force can be
neglected and with the simple Kessler (warm rain) microphysical scheme. In the present work, further
numerical solutions using more general and realistic experimental conditions are discussed. The upstreampropagating
disturbance, which was found in the author's previous study to desaturate the initially saturated
sounding for intermediate mountain heights, is present for all the simulations with taller mountains considered
in the present work. The inclusion of the Coriolis force however suppresses the upwind propagation
of the dry region and weakens the downstream development of convective cells.
The sensitivity to different microphysical schemes has also been investigated. The simple Kessler scheme
was compared with a more complete scheme, by Lin et al., which includes ice species. Some differences
between the warm-rain-only and ice-microphysics simulations emerge mainly as a consequence of the
different distributions of initial cloud water needed to produce a steady-state environmental flow. The
effects of the different microphysical schemes on the rainfall rate have also been analyzed, with significant
differences between them emerging in the case of narrower mountains. Finally, the sensitivity of the rainfall
to the surface temperature has been studied, showing that for higher surface temperatures, the rainfall rate
can be smaller although the available water content is larger, as a consequence of the differing microphysical
processes activated in the different temperature regimes.
Iris type:
01.01 Articolo in rivista
List of contributors:
Miglietta, Mario
Published in: