Abstract
Clustering of tropical thunderstorms constitutes an important climate
feedback because it influences the radiative balance. Convective
self-aggregation (CSA) is a profound modeling paradigm for explaining
the clustering of tropical oceanic thunderstorms. However, CSA is
hampered in the realistic limit of fine model resolution when cold
pools—dense air masses beneath thunderstorm clouds—are
well-resolved. Studies on CSA usually assume the surface temperature to
be constant, despite realistic surface temperatures varying
significantly between night and day.
Here we mimic the diurnal cycle in cloud-resolving numerical experiments
by prescribing a surface temperature oscillation. Our simulations show
that the diurnal cycle enables CSA at fine resolutions, and that the
process is even accelerated by finer resolutions. We attribute these
findings to vigorous combined cold pools emerging in symbiosis with
mesoscale convective systems. Such cold pools suppress buoyancy in
extended regions (~100 km) and enable the formation of
persistent dry patches. Our findings help clarify how the tropical cloud
field forms sustained clusters under realistic conditions and may have
implications for the origin of extreme thunderstorm rainfall and
tropical cyclones.