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R. A. Houze, Jr., U. Romatschke K. L. Rasmussen. Mesoscale Aspects of Storms Producing Floods over Arid Mountains. University of Washington. AGU Fall Meeting, Remote Sensing of Natural Hazards, San Francisco, 9 Dec 2011.
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R. A. Houze, Jr., U. RomatschkeK. L. Rasmussen Mesoscale Aspects of Storms Producing Floods over Arid Mountains University of Washington AGU Fall Meeting, Remote Sensing of Natural Hazards, San Francisco, 9 Dec 2011
"Almost 20 million people need shelter, food and emergency care. That is more than the entire population hit by the Indian Ocean tsunami, the Kashmir earthquake, Cyclone Nargis, and the earthquake in Haiti—combined.” Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon August 2010
2000 lives lost, extensive livestock, household, infrastructure & agricultural ($20B)
Recent papers: • Webster et al. (2011, GRL) • Houze et al. (2011, BAMS)
700 mb wind (~3 km) H L L L L Water vapor anomaly 500 mb wind Rain
ECMWF Ensemble Forecast analyzed by Webster et al. (2011) • 51 Ensemble members • 50/80 km resolution • Compared to CMORPH precipitation product
A COMPARISON OF RAINFALL IN 2008 AND 2010: Webster et al. 2011 • 2010 produced devastating floods but was not an outlier meteorologically • The hydrological uniqueness came because of the number of prior extreme events over the mountainous north, run-off due to drought in 2009, deforestation, and the TYPE OF STORM
Monsoon Mean Rainfall Climatology Webster et al. 2011
Summary of predictions of major July rain events in Pakistan Webster et al. 2011
The type of storm matters… • TRMM climatology shows different kind of rainstorms in eastern vs western Himalayan region
Climatology of extreme convective features shown by TRMM for 10 years of data Deep Convective Cores Wide Convective Cores BroadStratiformRegions
Floods! Broad stratiform precipitation occurred over the mountains of Pakistan 15:31UTC 17:09 UTC Broad stratiform! Houze et al., BAMS 2011
Normal 500 mb anomaly patterns for South Asian storms observed by TRMM Normal Isolated deep convection
Normal 500 mb anomaly patterns for South Asian storms observed by TRMM Normal Normal Isolated deep convection Broadstratiform
500 mb pattern 28 July 2010: very abnormal Normal Normal Isolated deep convection Broadstratiform
500 mb pattern 28 July 2010 was very abnormal Broadstratiform NOT NORMAL Broadstratiform NORMAL
Conclusions from Pakistan • The probability of major rain periods over Pakistan was predictable ~7-10 days in advance • Not every predicted rain event produced floods • The type of storm mattered—the flooding storms had mesoscale stratiform characteristics normally seen only in storms far to the east • The possibility of such cloud systems occurring in the west could be seen in the forecast wind pattern and from a knowledge of the satellite climatology
Leh, India, August 2010 • 300 casualties due to flood in a high altitude valley of the Indus River
Flash flood at Leh 0200
Afternoon convective scales grew upscale to form a mesoscale system that moved off the plateau and fed on low-level moisture Rasmussen and Houze 2011
Satellite climatology shows occurrence of wide convective systems or systems with broad stratiform regions to be extremely rare Deep Convective Cores Wide Convective Cores BroadStratiformRegions
Conclusions from Leh • The flood producing storms were squall lines of mesoscale proportions • The squall lines fed on moisture from low levels when they moved off the Tibetan Plateau • Such storm are rare over the Tibetan Plateau • Again, a satellite climatology of storm type for the region would help to anticipate such an event.
End This research was supported by NSF grants ATM-0820586 and NASA grant NNX10AH70G