Simulating precipitation efficiency across the deep convective gray zone

Kukulies, J., Prein, A., Morrison, H.. (2024). Simulating precipitation efficiency across the deep convective gray zone. Journal of Geophysical Research: Atmospheres, doi:https://doi.org/10.1029/2024JD041924

Title Simulating precipitation efficiency across the deep convective gray zone
Genre Article
Author(s) Julia Kukulies, Andreas Prein, Hugh Morrison
Abstract Precipitation efficiency (PE) relates cloud condensation to precipitation and thus reflects how much of the total atmospheric condensate reaches the surface as precipitation. Because the PE in convective storms is directly linked to their updraft and downdraft dynamics, it is a helpful metric to identify convective processes that influence precipitation. However, km‐scale model simulations do not properly resolve convective processes such as individual updrafts and entrainment, which raises the question if such simulations can accurately represent PE. Here, we present two methods to derive PE from standard model output because condensation is usually not available as an output variable. The first method estimates PE from the state variables vertical velocity, temperature, and pressure, whereas the second method estimates PE from ice water path (IWP) and precipitation. We validate the proposed methods with the explicitly calculated PE using a set of idealized Weather Research and Forecast model simulations of organized midlatitude convective storms at different horizontal grid spacings. We show that PE can be reliably estimated from state variables with an error of less than 5%, partly due to error cancellation effects. Additionally, PE can be simulated by km‐scale models within ∼15% accuracy compared to large‐eddy simulations (LESs). The IWP method is slightly less accurate with a stronger grid spacing dependency of the error, but since it is based on observable quantities, it allows for a validation of simulated PE with satellite observations. Finally, we analyze the grid spacing dependency of the climate change signal of PE and find that future decreases in PE in LESs are robustly captured by km‐scale models.
Publication Title Journal of Geophysical Research: Atmospheres
Publication Date Dec 1, 2024
Publisher's Version of Record https://doi.org/10.1029/2024JD041924
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