Rectification of the Diurnal Cycle and the Impact of Islands on the Tropical Climate
Abstract
Tropical islands are observed to be rainier than nearby ocean areas, and rainfall over the islands of the Maritime Continent plays an important role in the atmospheric general circulation. Convective heating over tropical islands is also strongly modulated by the diurnal cycle of solar insolation and surface enthalpy fluxes, and convective parameterizations in general circulation models are known to reproduce the phase and amplitude of the observed diurnal cycle of convection rather poorly. Connecting these ideas suggests that poor representation of the diurnal cycle of convection and precipitation over tropical islands in climate models may be a significant source of model biases. Here, we explore how a highly idealized island, which differs only in heat capacity from the surrounding ocean, could rectify the diurnal cycle and impact the tropical climate, especially the spatial distribution of rainfall. We perform simulations of radiative-convective equilibrium with the System for Atmospheric Modeling cloud-system-resolving model, with interactive surface temperature and a varied surface heat capacity. For the case of relatively small-scale simulations, where a shallow (~5 cm) slab-ocean "swamp island" surface is embedded in a deeper (~1 m) slab-ocean domain, the precipitation rate over the island is more than double the domain average value, with island rainfall occurring primarily in a strong regular convective event each afternoon. In addition to this island precipitation enhancement, the upper troposphere also warms with the inclusion of a low- heat capacity island. We discuss two radiative mechanisms that contribute to both island precipitation enhancement and free tropospheric warming, by producing a top-of-atmosphere radiative surplus over the island. The first radiative mechanism is a clear-sky effect, related to nonlinearities in the surface energy budget, and differences in how surface energy balance is achieved over surfaces of different heat capacities. The second radiative mechanism is a cloudy-sky effect, related to the timing of clouds with respect to solar forcing, as well as to the mean cloud fraction and height. We also discuss an advective mechanism for island precipitation enhancement, related to both the moist static energy convergence by the diurnally-reversing land/sea breeze, and the enhanced variability of moist static energy in the island subcloud layer. Preliminary results from larger-domain equatorial beta-channel simulations are also discussed, with potentially greater applicability to the impacts of islands on the large-scale tropical circulation.
- Publication:
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AGU Fall Meeting Abstracts
- Pub Date:
- December 2012
- Bibcode:
- 2012AGUFM.A51C0070C
- Keywords:
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- 3310 ATMOSPHERIC PROCESSES / Clouds and cloud feedbacks;
- 3322 ATMOSPHERIC PROCESSES / Land/atmosphere interactions;
- 3320 ATMOSPHERIC PROCESSES / Idealized model;
- 3371 ATMOSPHERIC PROCESSES / Tropical convection