Abstract
AbstractTropical precipitation has been found to be related to column relative humidity by a simple relationship known as the moisture–precipitation relationship . Based on one decade of daily ERA5 reanalysis data, we test whether is able to reproduce the tropical land–ocean precipitation contrast measured by , the ratio between mean precipitation over land and ocean. We find that captures the mean seasonal cycle of as long as we account for the fact that is distinct over land and ocean, and that it varies seasonally. Typical values of above 0.86 imply that precipitation is enhanced over land, relative to the ocean. We therefore investigate next whether this enhancement is due to the differences in and/or in the humidity distribution between land and ocean. We show that, rather than enhancing precipitation, the presence of land modifies in such a way that precipitation over land is disfavored compared to over ocean. Precipitation enhancement over land is instead explained by the modified terrestrial humidity distribution that features a more pronounced tail towards high values compared to the one over ocean. All results rest on an accurate construction of from the underlying data. Simple fit models such as an exponential function that were proposed by previous studies are unable to capture the seasonal cycle of and fail to explain land–ocean differences in precipitation.
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More From: Quarterly Journal of the Royal Meteorological Society
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