LI N, RAN Lingkun, HU Jinhu nd GAO Shouting
aKey Laboratory of Cloud-Precipitation Physics and Severe Storms, Institute of Atmospheric Physics, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Beijing,China; bMeteorological Disaster Prevention Technology Center of Jilin Province, Jilin Meteorological Service, Jilin, China; cGuizhou Key Lab of Mountounious Climate & Resources, Guizhou Institute of Mountain Environment and Climate, Guizhou Meteorological Bureau, Guiyang, China
ABSTRACT In this study, the physical meaning and generation mechanism of potential deformation (PD) are reinvestigated. A main trait of PD is that it contains deformation, which is an important factor to precipitation but not well applied in precipitation diagnosis. This paper shows PD shares similar features to deformation, but contains much more physical information than deformation. It can be understood as a type of deformation of a thermodynamic-coupled vector (u*, v*). For convenient application, squared PD (SPD) is used instead for analysis. By deriving the tendency equation of SPD, it is found that whether SPD is produced or reduced in the atmosphere is associated with the angle between the dilatation axes of PD and geostrophic PD. When the angle is less than π2 , SPD is generated. The diagnostic results during a heavy rainfall event in North China on 20 July 2016 show that the process of rapid increase in precipitation can be well revealed by SPD. The distribution of SPD becomes more organized and concentrated with increasing precipitation intensity. A diagnostic analysis of the SPD tendency equation shows that concentrated SPD is associated with the generation of SPD in the boundary layer followed by upward transport of the SPD. The concentration of SPD indicates a confluence of precipitation-favorable factors—namely, vertical wind shear and moist baroclinity, which can enhance vertical motions and thus cause an increase in precipitation. These diagnostic results further verify PD as a useful physical parameter for heavy precipitation diagnosis.
KEYWORDS Deformation; potential deformation; heavy precipitation
Deformation is a basic characteristic of the wind field and has a significant role in precipitation development.Although previous studies have shown the close relation between deformation and precipitation (Bluestein 1977;Deng 1986; Gao et al. 2008; Li, Ran, and Gao 2016), few have applied deformation to precipitation diagnosis.A possible reason is that deformation reflects the dynamic features of the atmosphere, while the occurrence of precipitation requires both dynamic and thermodynamic conditions.
On the basis of non-uniformly saturated moist atmosphere theory (Gao, Wang, and Zhou 2004; Liang, Lu,and Tollerud 2010; Ran, Li, and Gao 2013) and classical potential vorticity theory (Hoskins, McIntyre, and Robertson 1985), Li et al. (2017) introduced a new parameter called potential deformation (PD), which combines deformation with vertical wind shear, baroclinity,and static stability. By coupling with these thermodynamic factors, Li et al. (2017) showed that PD anomalies and mesoscale convective system (MCS) precipitation share very similar evolution patterns, verifying the high correlation of PD and the precipitation of MCSs.This correlation is attributed by Li et al. (2017) to the precipitation-favorable information contained in PD.However, several questions remain about PD, including its physical meaning, how large PD anomalies generate during heavy precipitation, and what role the synoptic environment described by PD has in the process of precipitation evolution. Therefore, in this paper, PD is reinvestigated in a heavy rainfall process, with the above questions explored by comparing the analogies of PD and deformation and by deriving the PD tendency equation.
The paper is arranged as follows. Section 2 gives the physical meaning of PD and derivations of its tendency equation. Section 3 provides a case study of the generation process of PD anomalies during heavy precipitation and their influence on the process of heavy precipitation evolution. A summary of the study is given in section 4.
According to Li et al. (2017), for a non-uniformly saturated atmosphere in p coordinates, PD (q) is defined as the sum of potential stretching deformation (qst) and potential shearing deformation (qsh) squared:

are stretching deformation and shearing deformation,respectively. u and v are zonal and meridional velocities,θ*is generalized potential temperature (GPT). For other notations in Equations (2—5) refer to Li et al. (2017). From Equations (2—5) it is found that qstand qshhave similar forms to the moist potential vorticity (MPV) (Schubert et al. 2001) or the generalized potential vorticity (GPV)(Gao, Wang, and Zhou 2004; Ran, Li, and Gao 2013). The difference is that MPV or GPV contains the vorticity,whereas qstand qshreflect the stretching deformation Estand shearing deformation Esh, respectively. However,like Estand Esh(Bluestein 1992), qstand qshcannot be used separately, because they are not Galilean invariants and may change with the coordinate rotation. When the coordinates (x, y, p ) rotate in an anticlockwise manner to x′, y′, (p) by an angle γ, potential stretching deformation and potential shearing deformation in the rotated coordinates can be respectively expressed by

Further, it can be shown that the sum of their squares is rotationally invariant:

This is why PD is defined as the sum of the potential stretching deformation and potential shearing deformation squared.
If the coordinate system( x, y, p ) is rotated anticlockwise through an angle γauntil q′sh= 0, then

Then, in the rotated coordinate,

which means that after the coordinate is rotated by γa,PD is only determined by potential stretching deformation.
The physical meaning of PD lies in the understanding of Equations (11) and (12). To illustrate this, a new vector( u*, v*) is introduced and supposed to satisfy

Comparing Equations (13) and (14) to Equations (4) and(5), the meaning of the new vector (u*, v*) to qstand qshis like the wind vector (u , v) to Estand Esh. qstcan be seen as stretching deformation of (u*, v*) and qshis shearing deformation of (u*, v*). Therefore, PD may be seen as the deformation of the new vector (u*, v*).A schematic illustration is given in Figure 1 based on Equations (11) and (12). In Figure 1, (u*, v*), denoted by the black arrows, forms a pure deformation pattern. The x′coordinate of the rotated coordinate in Figure 1(a) or the y′coordinate in Figure 1(b) is the dilatation axis of this deformation pattern. Perpendicular to the dilatation axis, the flow described by the new vector (u*, v*) is compressed, while parallel to the dilatation axis the flow is stretched. PD is simply the quantity that measures to what extent the flows in Figure 1 are deformed.Orientation of the dilatation axis of PD can be calculated from Equation (12).

Figure 1. The effects of (a, b) deformation and (c, d) potential deformation on a fluid element. Thick black arrows in (a, b) are wind fields( u, v ), while dotted black arrows in (c, d) are thermodynamic-weighted velocities (u*, v*). The red square is the fluid element at the origin, while the blue square is the original element after the effects of deformation or potential deformation. In (a, c),deformation and potential deformation have positive values and they act to stretch the fluid element along the x′ axis, which is called the dilatation axis, and compress it along the y′ axis, which is called contraction axis. In (b, d), deformation and potential deformation have negative values and they act to stretch the fluid element along the y′ axis (also the dilatation axis), and compress it along the x′axis (also the contraction axis). The illustrations of deformation in (a, b) are from Bluestein (1992). To find whether q is positive or negative, one can use Equation (13). Equation (14) gives the orientation of the dilatation axis, which describes the direction potential deformation is acting.

In Li et al. (2017), PD is written in its squared forms as

where Vh=(u, v) is horizontal wind vector. Equation(17) shows that squared potential deformation (SPD) is composed of three components: the coupling of vertical wind shear and moist baroclinity (denoted as C1); the coupling of total deformation and moist static stability(denoted as C2); and the cross-coupling of all the above elements (denoted as C3). SPD is used instead of PD because the sign of PD has little physical meaning and can make the analysis complicated. Li et al. (2017)showed that PD and SPD have very similar distribution patterns during the process of precipitation, and used SPD and its three components to find the connection between PD and MCS precipitation from the perspective of the precipitation-favorable information contained in PD. However, the physical process of how the large PD anomalies form during heavy precipitation and what role the synoptic environment described by PD has in precipitation evolution cannot be acquired from only Equation (17). Therefore, we derive the tendency equation of SPD to explore the above questions.
Conducting??t+ V · ? to qstand qsh(Equations (2)and (3)), respectively, and incorporating the motion and thermodynamic equations on the f-plane in p-coordinates for an inviscid, non-uniformly saturated atmosphere (Ran, Li, and Gao 2013), one can obtain

where V = (u , v, w) is the three-dimensional velocity,wis vertical velocity. Using the geostrophic wind ug=to substitute the φ-related parts in Equations (18) and (19) obtains

are potential stretching deformation and potential shearing deformation associated with geostrophic wind, respectively.
Then, the Lagrangian form of the SPD equation is given by

The term on the right-hand side of Equation (24) is called‘the generation term’, which is associated with ageostrophic wind. If the ageostrophic wind is very weak or the actual wind approaches the geostrophic wind, the generation term tends to zero. Then, SPD will be conserved for a non-uniformly saturated and frictionless atmosphere.
If we further introduce geostrophic potential deformationto representstandsh; namely,

Here, γbis the angle that the coordinate needs to rotate to make the geostrophic potential shearing deformation disappear (like Equations (11) and (12)).Remember that q andin the above equation can be positive or negative, and γaor γbcan be the orientation of the dilatation axis or contraction axis depending on the sign of q and(Figure 1). To make the problem easier, the orientation of the dilatation axes of PD and geostrophic PD is introduced as γdaand γdb, respectively. According to Figure 1, if q ≥0,γda= γa, otherwise, γda= γa+π2. If≥0, γdb= γb,otherwise, γdb= γb+π2. Therefore, one can derive that, whether q andare positive or negative, the generation term can be expressed as

This means that whether SPD is produced or reduced is determined by the angle between the dilatation axes of PD and geostrophic PD. Specifically, when
In the following section, SPD and its tendency equation are employed to diagnose the heavy rainfall event that occurred in North China during 19—20 July 2016.Here, the term ‘diagnose’ means using the SPD and the SPD tendency equation to detect the occurrence and evolution of precipitation and determine the possible mechanism for the production of SPD and thereby its influence on heavy precipitation.
The torrential rain event that occurred in North China during 19—20 July 2016 was a rare extreme heavy precipitation case in North China. During this process, precipitation at nine national stations exceeded the historical extreme value in Beijing, resulting in heavy casualties and economic losses. The National Centers for Environmental Prediction Global Forecast System analysis dataset was used for the analysis. The precipitation observations were obtained from the National Meteorological Center of the China Meteorological Administration.
Figure 2 presents the 700-hPa horizontal and vertical distributions of SPD (or PD tick marks) and precipitation at 0000 UTC and 0600 UTC 20 July. These two times were chosen since they belonged to the most rapid growth stage of precipitation in Beijing. As shown in Figure 2(a),at 0000 UTC, the 6-h accumulated precipitation center was over the areas of Hebei and Tianjin, with the maximum rainfall amount up to 109 mm per 6 h. At this time,precipitation in Beijing was below 50 mm per 6 h. SPD overlapped the precipitation area and showed strong anomalies. Outside the precipitation area, SPD values were less than 2 × 10-14K2Pa-2s-2, while within the precipitation area SPD values reached up to 18 × 10-14K2Pa-2s-2. Corresponding to the large values of SPD, PD tick marks (Figure 2(c)) within the precipitation area are much longer than those outside of the precipitation area. At 0600 UTC (Figure 2(b,d)), the contrast in SPD distributions between precipitation and nonprecipitation areas is even stronger.
Figure 2(a—d) provides strong evidence of the close connection between SPD and precipitation. However, comparing the times of 0000 UTC and 0600 UTC (Figure 2(a,c)versus 2(b,d)), the distributions of SPD are quite different.At 0000 UTC (Figure 2(a)), strong SPD anomalies are distributed sparsely, with two evident SPD centers, respectively, located in the northwest and east of the precipitation center. Around the northwest SPD center,PD tick marks (Figure 2(c)) are mostly west—east oriented(thick black line along 40°N), indicating a confluence of the thermally coupled flow (u*, v*) normal to these tick marks. In contrast, PD tick marks around the east SPD center are northeast—southwest oriented (thick black line along 118°E), indicating a confluence of (u*, v*) in the northwest—southeast direction. This means that the dynamic and thermodynamic information contained in( u*, v*) is concentrated mainly near the borders of the precipitation center, but not over the precipitation center.At 0600 UTC, SPD becomes more collective and organized with only one center, collocated with the precipitation center (Figure 2(b)). PD tick marks corresponding to this center (Figure 2(d)) are consistently southwest—northeast oriented and the lengths of the PD tick marks become much longer compared to Figure 2(c). In the meantime,precipitation evidently increases, with the maximum 6-h accumulated precipitation up to 137 mm per 6 h. This indicates a possible relationship between the concentrated and organized SPD and precipitation development.

Figure 2. (a—d) Horizontal distributions of SPD (black lines; units: 10-14 K2 Pa-2 s-2) and PD tick marks (units: 10-8 K Pa-1 s-1) at 700 hPa; vertical cross sections of SPD (solid black lines; units: 10-14 K2 Pa-2 s-2; six intervals) along (e) 38.5°N and (f) 39.5°N, with 6-h accumulated precipitation superposed (green bars). The left-hand column is 0000 UTC and the right-hand column is 0600 UTC 20 July 2016. PD tick marks are like deformation tick marks (Bluestein 1992). Their orientations are parallel to the dilatation axis of PD and their lengths are magnitudes of PD. The color-shaded areas are 6-h accumulated precipitation.
By seeing how SPD becomes concentrated over the precipitation region, one may also know how the precipitation increases. As we can see from Figure 2(e,f), which show the vertical distributions of SPD over the Beijing precipitation center at 0000 UTC and 0600 UTC 20 July 2016, the increase in precipitation is evident and the difference in the SPD distribution between the two times is also apparent. At 0000 UTC in Figure 2(e), strong SPD anomalies are confined below 750 hPa within the precipitation region. The maximum SPD is located in the boundary layer below 900 hPa at about 116°E. At 0600 UTC in Figure 2(f), SPD anomalies exhibit a distinct upward extension. Large values of SPD can reach up to 500 hPa in the mid atmosphere with a center at about 750 hPa collocating with the precipitation peak location. However, in the boundary layer, SPD becomes much smaller compared with 0000 UTC. Thus, it may be inferred that the organized SPD corresponding to the precipitation center at 700 hPa at 0600 UTC in Figure 2(b) is associated with the upward extension of SPD.
To investigate the reason for the concentration process of SPD, Equation (24), which is written as

is used. The terms on the right-hand side of Equation (30)are, respectively, the horizontal advection term, the vertical advection term, and the Lagrangian generation term.
Figure 3 shows the vertical temporal evolution of the average SPD and its forcing (Equation (30)) over the Beijing center (38.5°—41.5°N, 116°—118°E). As in Figure 3(a), large values of SPD (black solid lines) are first present in the boundary layer accompanying the appearance of precipitation (long black dashed line) at 1200 UTC on 19 July, and gradually extend upward with precipitation development. They show an inclination (black arrow) with height during the development of precipitation.

Figure 3. (a) Time—height cross sections of the total forcing (units: 10-18 K2 Pa-2 s-3), (b) the horizontal advection term (units: 10-18 K2 Pa-2 s-3), (c) the vertical advection term (units: 10-18 K2 Pa-2 s-3), and (d) the Lagrangian generation term (units: 10-18 K2 Pa-2 s-3)for the local change of SPD, averaged over the Beijing rainfall center (38.5—41.5°N, 116°—118°E), with solid lines representing the averaged SPD and long dashed lines the averaged 6-h accumulated precipitation; and (e) the horizontal distribution of the generation term (units: 10-18 K2 Pa-2 s-3) and (f) the tick marks of PD and geostrophic PD (units: 10-6 K Pa-1 s-1) at 950 hPa at 0000 UTC 20 July,with 6-h accumulated precipitation shaded.
Corresponding to the development of precipitation and appearance of large SPD, the total forcing for the local change of SPD (shaded areas; the sum of the three terms on the right-hand side of Equation (30)) appears strong from 1200 UTC 19 July to 0600 UTC 21 July(Figure 3(a)). Over the whole event, negative values of the total forcing are mainly in the near-surface layer below 950 hPa. Above these negative values are strong positive values at 950—800 hPa. In the precipitation development stage, another positive center of the total forcing appears in the middle levels at 750—600 hPa.According to Figure 3(a—c), the two positive forcing centers of the total forcing are mainly caused by the vertical advection term, which means that the upward transport of SPD from low levels to middle levels is the main contributing mechanism to SPD anomalies in the atmosphere. This is consistent with the vertical SPD extension in Figure 2(e,f), and implies that vertical transport is the main factor contributing to the local concentration of SPD.
However, upward transport of SPD anomalies means that there should be a source for the anomalies, which is attributed to the generation term. As shown in Figure 3(d), the generation term shows a positive center in the boundary layers overlapping the strong SPD anomalies.Nearly in the same place, the horizontal advection term shows a strong negative center.
As stated in section 2.2, whether the SPD can be generated is determined by the angle between the dilatation axes of PD and geostrophic PD, which can be obtained from the relative orientations of PD and geostrophic PD tick marks. To see how the SPD is generated in the boundary layer, Figure 3(f,g) also depict the horizontal distribution of the generation term and the tick marks of PD and geostrophic PD at 950 hPa at 0000 UTC 20 July. As shown in Figure 3(e,f), overlapping with the precipitation center, the generation term presents strong positive values, denoting the production of SPD.Corresponding to these positive values, the angles between the dilation axes (tick marks in Figure 3(b)) of PD and geostrophic PD are mostly less thanπ2.
To determine the role of SPD concentration in the precipitation increase, the three components of SPD in Equation (17) (also see Li et al. (2017)) are further analyzed.Figure 4 illustrates vertical cross-sections of all these components along the precipitation centers at 0000 UTC and 0600 UTC 20 July. By comparing Figure 4(a—f) and Figure 2(e—f), it can be seen that the coupling of vertical wind shear and moist baroclinity (C1) and the coupling of total deformation and moist static stability (C2) are the two components contributing to the distribution patterns of SPD anomalies within the precipitation areas. At 0000 UTC(Figure 4(a,c,e), SPD anomalies in the boundary layer are mainly caused by C2, denoting a horizontal confluence of moist static stability along the dilatation axis of deformation. At 0600 UTC (Figure 4(b,d,f), C2 in the boundary layer decreases and C1 in the mid-to-lower layers increases,resulting in a high-value center at 800—700 hPa similar to SPD in Figure 2(f). This indicates that the information on the abovementioned air concentration by the generation—transportation mechanism is contained in C1, i.e.,the coupling of vertical wind shear and moist baroclinity(black dashed boxes in Figure 4).
Vertical wind shear is an important enhancing mechanism for deep moist convection by strengthening the vertical gradients of pressure (Markowski and Richardson 2010). As in Figure 4(g,h), vertical wind shear at 0600 UTC around the precipitation center (116°E) reaches up to 21 × 10-4m s-1pa-1(black dashed boxes) — much larger than that at 0000 UTC. Meanwhile, generalized potential temperature (GPT) is moist-adiabatically conserved (Gao, Wang, and Zhou 2004), which means airflow will move along the GPT surfaces. Therefore, an increasing moist baroclinity makes the GPT isolines steep and thus enhances the vertical motion component along these isolines. As shown in Figure 4(i,j), owing to the strong vertical gradients of GPT, the GPT surfaces are nearly horizontal in the boundary layer around the precipitation center and sparse in the mid-to-lower atmosphere at 0000 UTC (black dashed boxes). At 0600 UTC, in the mid-tolower atmosphere, moist baroclinity increases evidently and the isolines become much steeper, implying a more vertical velocity component than that at 0000 UTC. As shown in Figure 4(k,l), the vertical velocity in the black dashed boxes associated with the concentrated SPD increase evidently from 0000 UTC to 0600 UTC.
On the basis of the close relationship between deformation and precipitation, Li et al. (2017) introduced a new diagnostic parameter, PD (potential deformation), for a more flexible application of deformation in the diagnosis of heavy precipitation. In this study, the physical meaning of PD, the development process of SPD during precipitation diagnosed from the PD tendency equation,and the role of SPD development in increasing precipitation are investigated. These aspects were not considered in Li et al. (2017).

Figure 4. Vertical cross-sections of SPD components (solid black lines; units: 10-14 K2 Pa-2 s-2; six intervals): (a, b) the coupling of vertical wind shear and moist baroclinity; (c, d) the coupling of total deformation and moist static stability; (e, f) the cross-coupling of all the above elements; (g, h) vertical wind shear (units: 10-4 m s-1 pa-1); (i, j) generalized potential temperature (units: K) and (k, l)omega (units: pa s-1) along 38.5°N at 0000 UTC (left-hand column) and 39.5°N at 0600 UTC (right-hand column), with 6-h accumulated precipitation superposed (green bars). The black dashed boxes indicate the main area where the air is concentrated by the generation—transportation mechanism.
It is shown that PD shares similar features to deformation but contains much more precipitation-favorable physical elements than deformation. PD is invariant relative to rotating coordinates and can be understood as a certain type of deformation of thermodynamiccoupled velocities (u*, v*). The meaning of PD to the thermodynamic-coupled velocities is like that of deformation to the wind velocities. By diagnosing PD, areas with strong confluence or diffluence of the thermodynamic-coupled velocities can be detected, and these areas are considered to be more favorable for precipitation occurrence. Then, SPD (squared potential deformation) is used for the diagnosis of a heavy rainfall event that occurred in North China on 20 July 2016. The results reaffirmed the close relationship between SPD development and strong precipitation evolution.A new finding is that, accompanying the rapid enhancement of precipitation intensity, the SPD distribution becomes more organized and concentrated. To study the reason causing the SPD’s concentration, the SPD tendency equation is derived. It is found that whether SPD is generated or reduced in the atmosphere is associated with the angle between the dilatation axes of PD and geostrophic PD. When the angle is less thanπ2, SPD is generated. Calculation of the SPD equation indicates that the abovementioned concentrated SPD in the midto-lower atmosphere is associated with a generation of SPD in the boundary layer and then an upward transport of the SPD. Further diagnosis of the SPD compositions shows that the concentration of SPD is mainly related to vertical wind shear and moist baroclinity. Both of these factors can enhance vertical motions, which then cause precipitation to increase.
In this paper, the parameter PD is reaffirmed to be a good indicator of heavy precipitation. However, what should be noted is that precipitation is associated with very complicated physical and microphysical processes.PD performs well in mesoscale convection, such as the case shown in this paper, but this might not be the case for stratiform precipitation or isolated convection with weak to moderate updraft. More cases should be studied for PD, which is the aim of future work.
Disclosure statement
No potential conflict of interest was reported by the authors.
Funding
This study was supported by the Strategic Pilot Science and Technology Special Program of the Chinese Academy of Sciences [grant number XDA17010105], the National Key Research and Development Project [grant number 2018YFC1507104], the Scientific and Technological Developing Scheme of Jilin Province [grant number 20180201035SF], and the National Natural Science Foundation of China [grant numbers 41875056, 41775140,and 41575065].
Atmospheric and Oceanic Science Letters2020年5期