Abstract

AbstractThe basic characteristics of cloud water, precipitation, and the dependence of precipitation efficiency (PE) on the influencing factors over the Tibetan Plateau (TP) are investigated. Results found that the liquid water path shows a significant downward trend in winter over the TP, and the ice water path shows a significant upward trend in the pre‐monsoon and winter seasons and a significant downward trend in the monsoon season in the western TP from 1998 to 2015. In the eastern TP, the precipitation in the monsoon season also shows a significant downward trend, which may be related to the weakening of the South Asian monsoon. Results have determined that precipitation depends more on the ice water cloud than on the liquid water cloud over the TP. Moreover, the convective available potential energy (CAPE) and the low‐tropospheric relative humidity (RH) are two environmental factors that have a prominent influence on the PE. During the monsoon season, higher CAPE and RH were conducive to a larger PE over the TP. The results suggest that the CAPE has a positive effect on the PE, which means that the PE is directly dependent on the convective precipitation, mainly due to the frequent convective activity and dominant convective precipitation over the TP.

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