Atmospheric Rivers: key to extratropical water vapor transport

Just about any time we get a flooding event these days, some wailing uninformed opportunist jumps on the “global warming did it” bandwagon in an attempt to explain it. Those of us who have been in the weather forecasting business for years often look for more mundane and well known phenomena as the cause.

One of those is the atmospheric river, or as we often call it here in California, the “Pineapple Express”. NOAA recently created an information page and PR on the issue, and I’m providing it here for those who would like to learn more about it.

This satellite view of atmospheric rivers is key to understanding extreme precipitation events along the West Coast. (Credit: NOAA)

Atmospheric rivers are relatively long, narrow regions in the atmosphere – like rivers in the sky – that transport most of the water vapor outside of the tropics. These columns of vapor move with the weather, carrying an amount of water vapor roughly equivalent to the average flow of water at the mouth of the Mississippi River. When the atmospheric rivers make landfall, they often release this water vapor in the form of rain or snow.

Although atmospheric rivers come in many shapes and sizes, those that contain the largest amounts of water vapor and the strongest winds can create extreme rainfall and floods, often by stalling over watersheds vulnerable to flooding. These events can disrupt travel, induce mudslides and cause catastrophic damage to life and property. A well-known example is the “Pineapple Express,” a strong atmospheric river that is capable of bringing moisture from the tropics near Hawaii over to the U.S. West Coast.

Not all atmospheric rivers cause damage; most are weak systems that often provide beneficial rain or snow that is crucial to the water supply. Atmospheric rivers are a key feature in the global water cycle and are closely tied to both water supply and flood risks —particularly in the western United States.

Flooding and debris-flows.
Flooding and debris flows can occur quickly and trap or kill unsuspecting victims in their path. (Credit: NOAA)

While atmospheric rivers are responsible for great quantities of rain that can produce flooding, they also contribute to beneficial increases in snowpack. A series of atmospheric rivers fueled the strong winter storms that battered the U.S. West Coast from western Washington to southern California from Dec. 10–22, 2010, producing 11 to 25 inches of rain in certain areas. These rivers also contributed to the snowpack in the Sierras, which received 75 percent of its annual snow by Dec. 22, the first full day of winter.

NOAA research (e.g., NOAA Hydrometeorological Testbed and CalWater) uses satellite, radar, aircraft and other observations, as well as major numerical weather model improvements, to better understand atmospheric rivers and their importance to both weather and climate.

Scientific research yields important data that helps NOAA National Weather Service forecasters issue warnings for potential heavy rain and flooding in areas prone to the impacts of atmospheric rivers as many as five to seven days in advance.

Quick Overview

  • Atmospheric Rivers (AR) are relatively narrow regions in the atmosphere that are responsible for most of the horizontal transport of water vapor outside of the tropics.
  • ARs move with the weather and are present somewhere on the earth at any given time.
  • In the strongest cases ARs can create major flooding when they make land-fall.
  • On average ARs are 400-600 km wide.
  • For comparison, a strong AR transports an amount of water vapor roughly equivalent to 10-20 times the average flow of liquid water at the mouth of the Mississippi River.
  • While ARs come in many shapes and sizes, those that contain the largest amounts of water vapor, the strongest winds, and stall over watersheds vulnerable to flooding, can create extreme rainfall and floods. These events can disrupt travel, induce mud slides, and cause catastrophic damage to life and property.
  • A well-known example of a type of strong AR that can hit the U.S. west coast is the “Pineapple Express,” due to their apparent ability to bring moisture from the tropics near Hawaii to the U.S. west coast.
  • Not all ARs cause damage – most are weak, and simply provide beneficial rain or snow that is crucial to water supply.
  • In short, ARs are a primary feature in the entire global water cycle, and are tied closely to both water supply and flood risks, particularly in the Western U.S.
  • The improved understanding of ARs and their importance has emerged from roughly a decade of scientific studies that have made use of new satellite, radar, aircraft and other observations and major numerical weather model improvements.

What are they, in more scientific terms?

ARs are the water-vapor rich part of the broader warm conveyor belt (e.g., Browning, 1990; Carlson, 1991), that is found in extratropical cyclones (“storms”). They result from the action of winds associated with the storm drawing together moisture into a narrow region just ahead of the cold front where low-level winds can sometimes exceed hurricane strength. The term AR was coined in a seminal scientific paper published in 1998 by researchers Zhu and Newell at MIT (Zhu and Newell 1998). Because they found that most of the water vapor was transported in relatively narrow regions of the atmosphere (90% of the transport occurred typically in 4-5 long, narrow regions roughly 400 km wide), the term atmospheric river was used. A number of formal scientific papers have since been published building on this concept (see the publication list), and forecasters and climate researchers are beginning to apply the ideas and methods to their fields. The satellite images at right show strong ARs as seen by satellite. The advent of these specialized satellite observations have revealed ARs over the oceans and have revolutionized understanding of the global importance of ARs (more traditional satellite data available in the past could not clearly detect AR conditions). The interpretation of these satellite images, which represent only water vapor, not winds, was confirmed using NOAA research aircraft data over the Eastern Pacific Ocean and wind profilers along the coast (Ralph et al. 2004). The event shown in the image was documented by Ralph et al. (2006), which concluded this AR produced roughly 10 inches of rain in 2 days and caused a flood on the Russian River of northern California. It was also shown that all floods on the Russian River in the 7-year period of study were associated with AR conditions. As of late 2010 there have been a number of papers published on major west coast storms where the presence and importance of AR conditions have been documented. These are provided in an informal list of the “Top Ten ARs” of the last several years on the U.S. West Coast. It is now recognized that the well-known “Pineapple express,” storms (a term that has been used on the U.S. West Coast for many years) correspond to a subset of ARs, i.e., those that have a connection to the tropics near Hawaii. In some of the most extreme ARs, the water vapor transport is enhanced by the fact that they entrain (draw in) water vapor directly from the tropics (e.g., Bao et al 2006, Ralph et al. 2011).

Can we forecast atmospheric rivers?

  • National Weather Service forecasters located along the west coast are now familiar with the concept of atmospheric rivers and can identify these phenomena in current numerical forecast models. This provides them the capability to give advanced warning of potential heavy rain sometime 5 to 7 days in advance. They have also learned to monitor polar orbiter microwave satellite imagery that provides advanced warning of the presence and movement of these phenomena in the Pacific. During the last two winters, with the development of atmospheric river observatories, forecasters have been able to monitor the strength and location of these rivers as they make landfall and thus improve short-term rainfall forecasts for flash flooding. There are still challenges to predicting rainfall totals in these events as models still struggle with the details of the duration and timing of AR’s as they make landfall.

Why are ARs capable of producing extreme rainfall on the U.S. West Coast?

AR conditions are conducive to creating heavy orographic precipitation (Ralph et al., 2005; MWR) because:

  • they are rich in water vapor,
  • they are associated with strong winds that force the water vapor up mountain sides,
  • the atmospheric conditions do not inhibit upward motions (because the atmospheric static stability is nearly neutral up to about 3 km MSL, on average)
  • once the air moves upward, the water vapor condenses and can form precipitation

What is the role of atmospheric rivers in creating floods?

  • Research has shown there were 42 ARs that impacted CA during the winters from 1997 to 2006, and the resulting seven floods that occurred on the Russian River watershed northwest of San Francisco during this period were all associated with AR conditions.
  • A major flood in California, known as the “New years Day Flood” in 1997 cause over $1 Billion in damages and had a well-defined AR.
  • Less formally, ARs are known to result in an order of magnitude larger post-storm stream flow “bumps” (increases) than other California storms, in the Merced and American Rivers.
  • The Pacific Northwest also regularly experiences this type of storm. Case in point is the landfalling AR of early November 2006 that produced heavy rainfall and devastating flooding and debris flows with region-wide damage exceeding $50 million.
  • The “Top-Ten AR” list highlights additional high-impact AR events.

How are science and applications of ARs being addressed?

  • Research experiments (CalJet and PacJet) performed by NOAA in the 1998, 2001, and 2002 were conducted to better understand landfalling Pacific winter storms.
  • CalJet/PacJet led to the development of the NOAA Hydrometeorology Testbed (HMT; hmt.noaa.gov). HMT’s aim is to accelerate the development and prototyping of advanced hydrometeorological observations, models, and physical process understanding, and to foster infusion of these advances into forecasting operations of the NWS, and to support the broader user community’s needs for 21st Century precipitation information.
  • Within HMT, scientists have developed and prototyped an atmospheric river observatory (ARO) designed to further our understanding of the impact of ARs on enhancing precipitation in the coastal mountains and the high Sierra of California.
  • Studies of the potential impacts of climate change on AR characteristics is the focus on an ongoing project – CalWater that is partnering with HMT, the California Energy Commission, Scripps Institution of Oceanography, USGS and others, to explore the potential implications for flood risk and water supply.
  • Under the USGS-led Multihazards project, ARs have become the focus of an emergency preparedness scenario for California that is intended to help the region prepare for a potentially catastrophic series of ARs. The scenario is named “ARkStorm” and has developed an informational video for use with the public (http://urbanearth.gps.caltech.edu/winter-storm/).

What are the benefits of studying atmospheric rivers?

  • The community of flood control, water supply and reservoir operators of the West Coast states see ARs as a key phenomenon to understand, monitor and predict as they work to mitigate the risks of major flood events, while maintaining adequate water supply. The frequency and strength of AR events in a given region over the course of a typical west-coast wet season greatly influences the fate of droughts, floods, and many key human endeavors and ecosystems. Better coupling of climate forecasts with seasonal weather forecasts of ARs can improve water management decisions. Long-term monitoring using satellite measurements, offshore aircraft reconnaissance, and land-based atmospheric river observatories, combined with better numerical modeling, scientific progress, and the development of AR-based smart decision aids for resource managers, will enable society to be more resilient to storms and droughts, while protecting our critical ecosystems.

examples of ARs

Examples of AR events that produced extreme precipitation on the US West Coast, and exhibited spatial continuity with the tropical water vapor reservoir as seen in SSM/I satellite observations of IWV. (From Ralph et al. 2011, Mon. Weather Review) 

The color scale used in these images represents the total amount of water vapor between the ocean surface and space. The data are from passive microwave sensors onboard polar orbiting satellites, which measure vertically integrated water vapor (IWV), i.e., the total amount of vapor in the atmosphere from the surface to space (g/cm2).
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February 13, 2011 8:40 am

Interesting information! It can definitely bring some new insight in atmospheric changes. I wonder what else can cause it and how it is going to be explaining afterwards… I understand that scientists need more advanced technology to examine this phenomenon. Hopefully you´ll get this kind of support soon.

Feet2theFire
February 14, 2011 1:14 am

I don’t know if it is exactly the same thing, but several times a year there is something that looks like these rivers that lines up from the area of central-to-east Texas toward IL-WI, more or less. It is a major conveyor of warmth and moisture to the U.S. midwest. Sometimes it is blocked making it more or less stationary, and sometimes not.
It was definitely the cause of the flooding in the Chicago area in September 1986. I am virtually certain it was behind the huge flooding in the upper Mississippi River in 1993 and 2003, when a blocking high prevented it from moving off to the east. In addition, this was the patten in biggest tornado day in history in 1974, with tornadoes across states from Texas to Ohio, including the Xenia, Ohio super tornado. I’ve always understood it to be connected with the frequent tornadoes in northern Texas, eastern Oklahoma and Kansas, especially if it is shifted a bit to the west. It seems to be the collision of the warm moist low-pressure Gulf air masses with the cool continental highs coming in from the west and northwest.
The colder air mass pushes under and lifting the warm, moist air mass up to elevations where the dew point meets the warm moisture, creating the conditions of clouds and rain, all sliding NNE in what I’ve referred to as a “train of rain”. (It may be simplistic thinking, but I personally think the southern front edge of the lifting air bulge – the “atmospheric topography” – of this collision literally rolls/spins the boundary air, with the rolling creating the angled funnels of tornadoes. This is somewhat different, perhaps from what forms tornadoes within hurricanes.)
Like hurricanes follow a bit of a U-turn path from the east and then turn a bit north and then northeast after making landfall along the Gulf coast, the easterly Gulf air’s boundary makes it to about about San Antonio (where serious flash floods can occur from this) before turning north and then NE.
The rotation of the two systems funnels the air along the SSW-NNE boundary, and it has quite a bit of stability in its straight-line shape, with a heading of about 30° east of north.
I’ve seen this hundreds of times on weather maps. I am surprised this wasn’t included in the article. Perhaps because they were focusing on oceanic systems.

February 16, 2011 6:37 am

Feet2theFire February 14, 2011 at 1:14 am
I don’t know if it is exactly the same thing, but several times a year there is something that looks like these rivers that lines up from the area of central-to-east Texas toward IL-WI, more or less. It is a major conveyor of warmth and moisture to the U.S. midwest. …

I’m thinking: not so much; After having lived down here in Texas for nigh onto 30 years, it’s easier to see (and feel!), via surface (data) plots and real-time observation of storm formation and movement that most of the moisture transported is at low-levels northward (and eastward) from the GOM (the gulf; esp during spring and summer months) … basically east of I-35 as the meteorologists and the hydrologists can point out via historical rainfall charts of these areas (up into as far north as Kansas as I recall from the rainfall charts).
That’s not to discount an event or two involving AR in any period of years and the occasional hurricane which draws with it an enormous airmass …
.

upcountrywater
March 7, 2011 8:37 pm

I’m liking the 13 Oct. 2009.
Can be hot, very hot there in the Philippines, Equator hot.
A massive 6,000 mile river, gushing for weeks….and weeks…
http://www.esrl.noaa.gov/psd/atmrivers/img/ar_examples.sm.png