A Case Study of Cold-Season Emergent Orographic Convection and Its Impact on Precipitation. Part I: Mesoscale Analysis

Francis O.T. Afrifa, Bart Geerts, Lulin Xue, Sisi Chen, Christopher Hohman, Coltin Grasmick, Jeffrey French, Katja Friedrich, Robert M. Rauber, Sarah Tessendorf, Troy Zaremba

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

It is not uncommon for layers within the warm conveyor belt in a frontal system to become potentially unstable, releasing elevated convection. The present study examines this destabilization process over complex terrain, and resulting precipitation, with a focus on the surface coupling, orographic ascent, and the initiation and evolution of convective cells. This study uses detailed observations combined with numerical modeling of a baroclinic system passing over the Central Idaho Mountains in the United States on 7 February 2017. The data were collected as part of the Seeded and Natural Orographic Wintertime Clouds: the Idaho Experiment (SNOWIE). Specifically, observations from a ground-based scanning X-band radar and an airborne profiling Doppler W-band radar along;100-km-long flight tracks aligned with the wind describe the development and evolution of convective cells above shallow stratiform orographic clouds. Convection-permitting numerical simulations of this event, with an inner domain grid resolution of 0.9 km, capture the emergence and vertical structure of the convective cells. Therefore, they are used to describe the advection of warm, moist air over a retreating warm front, cold-air pooling within the Snake River basin and adjacent valleys, destabilization in a moist layer above this shallow stable layer, and instability release in orographic gravity wave updrafts. In this case, the convective cells topped out near 6 km MSL, and the resulting precipitation fell mostly leeward of the ridge where convection was triggered, on account of strong cross-barrier flow. Sequential convection initiation over terrain ridges and rapid downwind transport led to banded precipitation structures.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)2229-2250
Number of pages22
JournalMonthly Weather Review
Volume153
Issue number10
DOIs
StatePublished - Oct 2025
Externally publishedYes

Keywords

  • Convection
  • Extratropical cyclones
  • Mixed precipitation
  • Orographic effects
  • Radars/Radar observations

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