Abstract

Abstract Realistic mesoscale model simulations using the Weather Research and Forecasting (WRF) Model and idealized dry simulations were used to study the mechanisms responsible for the formation and evolution of wide cold-frontal rainbands (WCFRs) associated with a wintertime cyclone that moved onto the Washington coast. The WRF simulation reproduced observed characteristics of three successively formed WCFRs, including their spacing and movement as well as the timing of the formation of two WCFRs behind the first. Sensitivity experiments showed that melting-induced cooling in the stratiform precipitation area behind the surface cold front was essential for the formation of the first and second WCFRs, whereas the third WCFR was formed by the release of potential instability within an ascent forced by upper-level frontogenesis. Enhanced frontal updrafts responsible for the first and second WCFRs were created by a superposition of a broad updraft caused by frontal dynamics and upward-propagating gravity waves generated by the melting-induced cooling. The dry simulations forced by specified cooling revealed specific mechanisms for the wave generation and the evolution of the first and second WCFRs. The gravity waves were generated at the intersection of the low-level frontal zone and the melting layer, where strong vertical shear of the cross-front wind and upshear-sloped cooling by melting cooperatively enhanced the wave generation. The formation of the second WCFR behind the first and subsequent dissipation of these WCFRs was attributed to the evolution of a wave pattern associated with the evolution of cross-front flow above the frontal zone.

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