Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where R. Roca is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by R. Roca.


Journal of Applied Meteorology and Climatology | 2010

Comparing Satellite and Surface Rainfall Products over West Africa at Meteorologically Relevant Scales during the AMMA Campaign Using Error Estimates

R. Roca; Philippe Chambon; Isabelle Jobard; Pierre-Emmanuel Kirstetter; Marielle Gosset; Jean Claude Bergès

Abstract Monsoon rainfall is central to the climate of West Africa, and understanding its variability is a challenge for which satellite rainfall products could be well suited to contribute to. Their quality in this region has received less attention than elsewhere. The focus is set on the scales associated with atmospheric variability, and a meteorological benchmark is set up with ground-based observations from the African Monsoon Multidisciplinary Analysis (AMMA) program. The investigation is performed at various scales of accumulation using four gauge networks. The seasonal cycle is analyzed using 10-day-averaged products, the synoptic-scale variability is analyzed using daily means, and the diurnal cycle of rainfall is analyzed at the seasonal scale using a composite and at the diurnal scale using 3-hourly accumulations. A novel methodology is introduced that accounts for the errors associated with the areal–time rainfall averages. The errors from both satellite and ground rainfall data are computed u...


Journal of the Atmospheric Sciences | 2005

Extratropical Dry-Air Intrusions into the West African Monsoon Midtroposphere: An Important Factor for the Convective Activity over the Sahel

R. Roca; Jean-Philippe Lafore; Catherine Piriou; Jean-Luc Redelsperger

Abstract This paper investigates the relationship between large-scale dynamics, water vapor, and organized convection over West Africa. Making use of a simplified condensation hypothesis, a back-trajectory model fed by NCEP-analyzed winds is used to reconstruct the midtropospheric humidity field over Africa during July to August 1992. The approach documents both the moisture content and the origin of the air masses. Meteosat satellite infrared imagery is used to characterize the convective systems. A case study analysis reveals that very dry air patches (RH < 5%) are located in the immediate midtropospheric environment of a typical squall line. Such dry-air structures are shown to originate in the upper levels (200–250 hPa) on the anticyclonic side of the polar jet stream at 50°N. Focusing on the Sahel region, dry events are isolated using the time series of the 500-hPa relative humidity distribution during the monsoon period. These dry events are shown to be composed of extratropical air. Composite analy...


Climate Dynamics | 2012

The role of the Indian monsoon onset in the West African monsoon onset: observations and AGCM nudged simulations

Emmanouil Flaounas; Serge Janicot; Sophie Bastin; R. Roca; Elsa Mohino

In spring the inland penetration of the West African Monsoon (WAM) is weak and the associated rainband is located over the Guinean coast. Then within a few days deep convection weakens considerably and the rainband reappears about 20xa0days after over the Sahel, where it remains until late September signalling the summer rainy season. Over the period 1989–2008 a teleconnection induced by the Indian monsoon onset is shown to have a significant impact on the WAM onset, by performing composite analyses on both observational data sets and atmospheric general circulation model simulations ensembles where the model is nudged to observations over the Indian monsoon sector. The initiation of convective activity over the Indian subcontinent north of 15°N at the time of the Indian monsoon onset results in a westward propagating Rossby wave establishing over North Africa 7–15xa0days after. A back-trajectory analysis shows that during this period, dry air originating from the westerly subtropical jet entrance is driven to subside and move southward over West Africa inhibiting convection there. At the same time the low-level pressure field over West Africa reinforces the moisture transport inland. After the passage of the wave, the dry air intrusions weaken drastically. Hence 20xa0days after the Indian monsoon onset, convection is released over the Sahel where thermodynamic conditions are more favourable. This scenario is very similar in the observations and in the nudged simulations, meaning that the Indian monsoon onset is instrumental in the WAM onset and its predictability at intraseasonal scale.


Climate Dynamics | 2012

The West African monsoon onset in 2006: sensitivity to surface albedo, orography, SST and synoptic scale dry-air intrusions using WRF

Emmanouil Flaounas; Serge Janicot; Sophie Bastin; R. Roca

In order to test the sensitivity of the transitional phase of the 2006 West African monsoon (WAM) onset to different mechanisms, weather research and forecasting (WRF) model simulations have been carried out addressing the role of the Saharan heat low (SHL) and its sensitivity to the albedo field and to the northern Africa orography, and the role of the sea surface temperature (SST) in the eastern tropical Atlantic and Mediterranean. Lowering albedo over the desert region induces a northward location of the inter-tropical convergence zone (ITCZ), while removing mountains in North Africa reduces rainfall over West Africa. Shifting SST forward by 15xa0days leads to a northward location of the ITCZ before the WAM onset. However none of these factors modifies the timing of the WAM onset in 2006. The transitional phase of the 2006 WAM onset has been examined in more detail. The enhancement of SHL intensity, combined with the development of the oceanic cold tongue in the Guinea gulf, leads to low-level moisture flux divergence in the ITCZ reducing rainfall and increasing low-level humidity over the Sahel. However, weakening of convection can be clearly attributed to dry-air intrusions in mid-levels, originating from the subtropical westerly jet and associated with Rossby wave pattern over North Africa. Sensitivity tests on the synoptic scale forcing outside of the WRF model domain confirm the dominating role of large-scale dynamics to control the transitional phase of the WAM onset and its timing. However it is shown that the regional factors can modulate this larger scale forcing.


Surveys in Geophysics | 2012

Tropical and Extra-Tropical Influences on the Distribution of Free Tropospheric Humidity Over the Intertropical Belt

R. Roca; Rodrigo Guzman; Julien Lemond; Joke Meijer; Laurence Picon; Hélène Brogniez

Free tropospheric humidity (FTH) is a key parameter of the radiation budget of the Earth. In particular, its distribution over the intertropical belt has been identified as an important contributor to the water vapour feedback. Idealized radiative transfer computations are performed to underscore the need to consider the whole probability distribution function (PDF) rather than the arithmetical mean of the FTH. The analysis confirmed the overwhelming role of the dry end of the PDF in the radiative perturbation of the top of atmosphere longwave budget. The physical and dynamical processes responsible for the maintenance of this dry part of the FTH distribution are reviewed, and the lateral mixing between the tropics and the extra-tropics is revealed as a major element of the dry air dynamics. The evolution of this lateral mixing in the framework of the global warming is discussed, and perspectives of work are listed as a mean of a conclusion.


Atmospheric Science Letters | 2011

Progress in understanding of weather systems in West Africa

Jean-Philippe Lafore; Cyrille Flamant; Françoise Guichard; Douglas J. Parker; Dominique Bouniol; Andreas H. Fink; V. Giraud; Marielle Gosset; Nicholas M. J. Hall; Hartmut Höller; Sarah C. Jones; Alain Protat; R. Roca; Frank Roux; F. Saïd; Chris D. Thorncroft


Climate Dynamics | 2010

Scale decomposition of atmospheric water budget over West Africa during the monsoon 2006 from NCEP/GFS analyses

Soline Bielli; R. Roca


6th Workshop of the International Precipitation Working Group (IPWG6) | 2012

The Megha-Tropiques rainfall products ground validation plan

Marielle Gosset; R. Roca; Nicolas Viltard; Matias Alcoba; Frédéric Cazenave


6th Workshop of the International Precipitation Working Group (IPWG6) | 2012

Megha-Tropiques mission status

Nicolas Viltard; R. Roca; Hélène Brogniez; Marielle Gosset


4th AMMA International Conference | 2012

Recent climate variability in West Africa from long series of METEOSAT data

Laurence Picon; R. Roca; Hélène Brogniez; M. Schröder

Collaboration


Dive into the R. Roca's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Elsa Mohino

Complutense University of Madrid

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Jean Claude Bergès

École pratique des hautes études

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Nicolas Viltard

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Kusuma G. Rao

Indian Space Research Organisation

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Soline Bielli

Université du Québec à Montréal

View shared research outputs
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge