Abstract

AbstractAn atmospheric river (AR) impacting Tasmania, Australia, and the Southern Ocean during the austral summer on 28–29 January 2018 during the Southern Ocean Clouds, Radiation, Aerosol Transport Experimental Study campaign is analyzed using a modeling and observational approach. Gulfstream‐V dropsonde measurements and Global Precipitation Measurement radar analyses were used in conjunction with Weather Research and Forecasting model simulations with water vapor tracers to investigate the relative contributions of tropical and midlatitude moisture sources to the AR. Moisture associated with a monsoonal tropical depression became entrained into a midlatitude frontal system that extended to 60°S, reaching the associated low‐pressure system 850 km off the coast of Antarctica—effectively connecting the tropics and the polar region. Tropical moisture contributed to about 50% of the precipitable water within the AR as the flow moved over the Southern Ocean near Tasmania. The tropical contribution to precipitation decreased with latitude, from >70% over Australia, to ~50% off the Australian coast, to less than 5% poleward of 55°S. The integrated vapor transport (IVT) through the core of the AR reached above 500 kg m−1 s−1 during 1200 UTC 28 January to 0600 UTC 29 January, 1.29 times the average amount of water carried by the world's largest terrestrial river, the Amazon. The high IVT strength might be attributed to the higher water vapor content associated with the warmer temperatures across Australia and the Southern Ocean in austral summer.

Highlights

  • KEY POINTSThe contribution of moisture from the tropics to precipitation within an Australian summer atmospheric river is documented

  • Atmospheric Rivers (ARs) play a critical role in the global hydrologic cycle as 90% of the meridional moisture flux in the extratropics occurs along these filamentary structures associated with the low-level jet stream ahead of the cold front of extratropical cyclones (Zhu & Newell, 1998, Ralph et al, 2018, American Meteorological Society, 2020)

  • The studies resulted from an unanticipated opportunity to observe the structure and microphysics of an AR event over the region that occurred during the SOCRATES

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Summary

KEY POINTS

The contribution of moisture from the tropics to precipitation within an Australian summer atmospheric river is documented. Over 50% of the moisture arriving at the Southern Ocean at altitudes above the 0°C isotherm was sourced from tropical latitudes. The tropical contribution to precipitation decreased with latitude, > 70% over Australia, ~50%. Off Australia, and < 10% poleward of 60 S

Introduction
Satellite data and imagery
Model simulation
AR characteristics
Comparison of the model simulation with observations
Tropical vs mid-latitude moisture sources
Findings
Summary and conclusions
Full Text
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