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Orographic precipitation in the tropics: experiments in Dominica

Authors :
Smith, R.B.
Schafer, P.
Kirshbaum, D.J.
Regina, E.
Source :
Journal of the Atmospheric Sciences. June, 2009, Vol. 66 Issue 6, p1698, 19 p.
Publication Year :
2009

Abstract

The 'natural laboratory' of mountainous Dominica (15[degrees]N) in the trade wind belt is used to study the physics of tropical orographic precipitation in its purest form, unforced by weather disturbances or by the diurnal cycle of solar heating. A cross-island line of rain gauges and 5-min radar scans from Guadeloupe reveal a large annual precipitation at high elevation (7 m [yr.sup.-1]) and a large orographic enhancement factor (2 to 8) caused primarily by repetitive convective triggering over the windward slope. The triggering is caused by terrain-forced lifting of the conditionally unstable trade wind cloud layer. Ambient humidity fluctuations associated with open-ocean convection may play a key role. The convection transports moisture upward and causes frequent brief showers on the hilltops. The drying ratio of the full air column from precipitation is less than 1% whereas the surface air dries by about 17% from the east coast to the mountain top. On the lee side. a plunging trade wind inversion and reduced instability destroys convective clouds and creates an oceanic rain shadow.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00224928
Volume :
66
Issue :
6
Database :
Gale General OneFile
Journal :
Journal of the Atmospheric Sciences
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsgcl.202705369