Abstract

Abstract The extreme precipitation (EP) in the early and late rainy seasons in Southern China is investigated from the perspective of moist static energy (MSE). At the synoptic time scale, the EP is accompanied by the charge–discharge paradigm of the vertically integrated MSE (〈MSE〉); the positive 〈MSE〉 anomaly reaches the peak one day before EP and decreases quickly during the event. The charge–discharge paradigm of 〈MSE〉 is dominated by the horizontal and vertical advection, respectively. However, synoptic systems responsible for the 〈MSE〉 charge in the early and late rainy seasons are different due to the different horizontal distributions of climatological MSE in the lower troposphere caused by the northward migration of solar radiation and the monsoon system. At the interannual time scale, more EP in the early (late) rainy season is associated with the higher seasonal-mean 〈MSE〉 that can be caused by the anomalous anticyclone (cyclone) in the western North Pacific induced by the SST anomalies in the tropical Indian Ocean and central North Pacific (the tropical Pacific). The multimodel ensemble mean of CMIP6 models reproduces well the observed 〈MSE〉–EP relationship in both the historical and Shared Socioeconomic Pathway 5–8.5 (SSP5–8.5) runs. Moreover, the mean state of 〈MSE〉 increases in the SSP5–8.5 compared to historical runs along with more frequent occurrence of EP events. Hence, 〈MSE〉 can serve as a useful metric for studying EP in Southern China at various time scales.

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