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  4. Atmospheric Rivers In South-Central Chile: Zonal And Tilted Events
 
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Atmospheric Rivers In South-Central Chile: Zonal And Tilted Events

Date Issued
2024-03-26
Author(s)
Marín, Julio  
Facultad de Ciencias  
René Garreaud
Martín Jacques‐Coper
Diego A. Narváez
DOI
10.3390/atmos15040406
WoS ID
WOS:001211248200001
Abstract
The extratropical west coast of South America has one of the largest frequencies of landfalling atmospheric rivers (ARs), with dozens of events per season that account for ~50% of the annual precipitation and can produce extreme rainfall events in south-central Chile. Most ARs form an acute angle with the Andes, but, in some cases, the moist stream impinges nearly perpendicular to the mountains, referred to as zonal atmospheric rivers (ZARs). Enhanced surface-based and upper-air measurements in Concepcion (36.8° S), as well as numerical simulations, were used to characterize a ZAR and a meridionally oriented AR in July 2022. They represent extremes of the broad distribution of winter storms in this region and exhibit key features that were found in a composite analysis based on larger samples of ZARs and tilted ARs. The latter is associated with an upper-level trough, broad-scale ascent, extratropical cyclone, and cold front reaching southern Chile. Instead, ZARs are associated with tropospheric-deep, strong zonal flow and a stationary front across the South Pacific, with ascent restricted upstream of the Andes. Consequently, ZARs have minimum precipitation offshore but a marked orographic precipitation enhancement and exhibit relatively warm temperatures, thus resulting in an augmented risk of hydrometeorological extreme events.
Subjects

Atmospheric Science

Environmental Science...

Environmental Science...

Meteorology And Atmos...

OCDE Subjects

Natural Sciences::Ear...

Quartile (Date Issued)
Q3
License
acceso abierto
Open Science Path
https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/

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