Abstract
Cold pools formed by precipitating convective clouds are an important
source of mesoscale temperature variability. However, their
sub-mesoscale (100 m to 10 km) structure has not been studied, which
impedes validation of numerical models and understanding of their
atmospheric and societal impacts. We quantify temperature variability in
observed and simulated cold pools using variograms calculated from dense
network observations collected during a field experiment and in
high-resolution case study and idealized simulations. The temperature
variance in cold pools is enhanced for spatial scales between
~5-15 km compared to pre-cold pool conditions, but the
magnitude varies strongly with cold pool evolution and environment.
Simulations capture the overall cold pool variogram shape well but
underestimate the magnitude of the variability, irrespective of model
resolution. Temperature variograms outside of cold pool periods are
represented by the range of simulations evaluated here, suggesting that
models misrepresent cold pool formation and/or dissipation processes.