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Event

Characterization of the processes that lead to the destabilization and onset of deep tropical convection

Monday, February 17, 2020 15:30to17:00
Room 934

Atmospheric and Oceanic Sciences Departmental Seminar Series

presents

Characterization of the processes that lead to the destabilization and onset of deep tropical convection

a talk by


Assistant Professor,
Climate and Space Sciences and Engineering, University of Michigan 

Tropical convection is highly sensitive by fluctuations in temperature and moisture in the lower-free troposphere as well as processes that occur in the planetary boundary layer (BL, 850-1000 hPa). It is shown that a semi-empirical framework precipitation-buoyancy relation can capture many of the processes that lead to convective onset and evolution in association with tropical motion systems. Through simplified equations it is shown that steady-state convection evolves towards a state of moisture quasi-equilibrium: moist convective instability is consumed while the free troposphere is moistened by convection in such a way that the mean free-tropospheric buoyancy is unchanged.

Monday Feb 17/ 3:30 PM/ Burnside Hall/ Room 934

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