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On the Key Dynamical Processes Supporting the 21.7 Zhengzhou Record-breaking Hourly Rainfall in China.

Authors :
Wei, Peng
Xu, Xin
Xue, Ming
Zhang, Chenyue
Wang, Yuan
Zhao, Kun
Zhou, Ang
Zhang, Shushi
Zhu, Kefeng
Source :
Advances in Atmospheric Sciences. Mar2023, Vol. 40 Issue 3, p337-349. 13p.
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

An extremely heavy rainfall event occurred in Zhengzhou, China, on 20 July 2021 and produced an hourly rainfall rate of 201.9 mm, which broke the station record for mainland China. Based on radar observations and a convection-permitting simulation using the WRF-ARW model, this paper investigates the multiscale processes, especially those at the mesoscale, that support the extreme observed hourly rainfall. Results show that the extreme rainfall occurred in an environment characteristic of warm-sector heavy rainfall, with abundant warm moist air transported from the ocean by an abnormally northward-displaced western Pacific subtropical high and Typhoon In-Fa (2021). However, rather than through back building and echo training of convective cells often found in warm-sector heavy rainfall events, this extreme hourly rainfall event was caused by a single, quasi-stationary storm in Zhengzhou. Scale separation analysis reveals that the extreme-rain-producing storm was supported and maintained by the dynamic lifting of low-level converging flows from the north, south, and east of the storm. The low-level northerly flow originated from a mesoscale barrier jet on the eastern slope of the Taihang Mountain due to terrain blocking of large-scale easterly flows, which reached an overall balance with the southerly winds in association with a low-level meso-β-scale vortex located to the west of Zhengzhou. The large-scale easterly inflows that fed the deep convection via transport of thermodynamically unstable air into the storm prevented the eastward propagation of the weak, shallow cold pool. As a result, the convective storm was nearly stationary over Zhengzhou, resulting in record-breaking hourly precipitation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
02561530
Volume :
40
Issue :
3
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Advances in Atmospheric Sciences
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
163149315
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1007/s00376-022-2061-y