The Tropical Cyclone Response to Structural and Temporal Variability in the Environmental Wind Profile

The Tropical Cyclone Response to Structural and Temporal Variability in the Environmental Wind Profile
Title The Tropical Cyclone Response to Structural and Temporal Variability in the Environmental Wind Profile PDF eBook
Author Matthew J Onderlinde
Publisher
Pages
Release 2016
Genre
ISBN

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The aim of this dissertation is to attain a better understanding of how tropical cyclones (TCs) respond to variations in the three-dimensional environmental wind field. Much attention has been given to the impact of environmental wind shear in the 850 -- 200 hPa layer on tropical cyclones. However, even with the same magnitude of shear, helicity in this layer can vary significantly. A new parameter is presented, the tropical cyclone-relative environmental helicity (TCREH). Positive TCREH leads to a tilted storm that enhances local storm scale helicity in regions of convection within the TC. Initially we proposed that this enhanced local scale helicity may allow for more robust and longer lasting convection which is more effective at generating latent heat and subsequent TC intensification. Further investigation shows that this is a secondary influence on TC intensity and that variations in the azimuthal and radial position of convection in the TC play a stronger role. Vertical tilt of the vortex is often attributed to wind shear. Different values of helicity modulate this tilt and certain tilt configurations are more favorable for development or intensification than others, suggesting that mean positive environmental helicity is more favorable for development and intensification than mean negative helicity. Idealized modeling simulations demonstrate the impact of environmental helicity on TC development and intensification. Results show that wind profiles with the same 850-200 hPa wind shear but different values of helicity lead to different rates of development. TCREH also is computed from Era-Interim reanalysis (1979 -- 2011) and GFS analyses (2004 -- 2011) to determine if a significant signal exists between TCREH and TC intensification. Mean annular helicity is averaged over various time periods and correlated with the TC intensity change during those periods. Results suggest a weak but statistically significant correlation between environmental helicity and TC intensity change with positive helicity being more favorable for intensification. Another goal of this dissertation is to identify the mechanisms that lead to the observed variations in intensification rate. Results suggest that the difference in intensification rate between TCs embedded in positive versus negative TCREH primarily results from the position of convection and associated latent heat fluxes relative to the wind shear vector. When TCREH is positive, convection is more readily advected upshear and air parcels that experience larger fluxes are more frequently ingested into the TC core. Trajectories computed from high resolution simulations demonstrate the recovery of equivalent potential temperature downwind of convection, latent heat flux near the TC core, and parcel routes through updrafts in convection. Trajectory characteristics show that low-level unstable air is lofted into deep convection near the radius of maximum winds more frequently when TCREH is positive. Contoured frequency-by-altitude diagrams (CFADs) show that convection is distributed differently around TCs embedded in environments characterized by positive versus negative TCREH. They also show that the nature of the most intense convection differs only slightly between cases of positive and negative TCREH. Finally, the implications of time-varying environments around TCs are examined. Until now, idealized numerical simulations of the tropical cyclone (TC) response to time-varying wind shear have applied instantaneous changes in the TC environment. A new modeling framework allows for smoothly transitioning environmental wind states: time-varying point-downscaling (TVPDS). TVPDS is an enhancement of the point-downscaling technique (Nolan 2011) developed for the Weather Research and Forecast (WRF) model. It uses analysis nudging to smoothly transition between different environmental vertical wind (and/or temperature and moisture) profiles while coordinating the point-downscaling method such that the environment remains in balance. Using this new framework, results from previous studies are reexamined to test whether the instantaneous 'shock' to the environment has implications for TC intensity evolution. Results suggest that instantaneous changes to the TC environment indeed do lead to an unrealistic response to an increase in shear. TVPDS simulations of quasi-steady state, moderately intense (~50 ms-1) TCs show that the response to increasing wind shear is a steady reduction in intensity without a recovery to the pre-shear intensity. TVPDS simulations also show that the rate at which the TC weakens depends on how rapidly the environment transitions from low to high shear. Analyses of surface fluxes and regions of convection are presented to determine how the time-varying shear affects the TC.

The Structure of Vertical Wind Shear in Tropical Cyclone Environments

The Structure of Vertical Wind Shear in Tropical Cyclone Environments
Title The Structure of Vertical Wind Shear in Tropical Cyclone Environments PDF eBook
Author Peter M. Finocchio
Publisher
Pages
Release 2017
Genre
ISBN

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The vertical wind shear measured between 200 and 850 hPa is commonly used to diagnose environmental interactions with a tropical cyclone (TC) and to forecast the storm's intensity and structural evolution. More often than not, stronger vertical shear within this deep layer prohibits the intensification of TCs and leads to predictable asymmetries in precipitation. But such bulk measures of vertical wind shear can occasionally mislead the forecaster. In the first part of this dissertation, we use a series of idealized numerical simulations to examine how a TC responds to changing the structure of unidirectional vertical wind shear while fixing the 200-850-hPa shear magnitude. These simulations demonstrate a significant intensity response, in which shear concentrated in shallow layers of the lower troposphere prevents vortex intensification. We attribute the arrested development of TCs in lower-level shear to the intrusion of mid-level environmental air over the surface vortex early in the simulations. Convection developing on the downshear side of the storm interacts with the intruding air so as to enhance the downward flux of low-entropy air into the boundary layer. We also construct a two-dimensional intensity response surface from a set of simulations that sparsely sample the joint shear height-depth parameter space. This surface reveals regions of the two-parameter space for which TC intensity is particularly sensitive. We interpret these parameter ranges as those which lead to reduced intensity predictability. Despite the robust response to changing the shape of a sheared wind profile in idealized simulations, we do not encounter such sensitivity within a large set of reanalyzed TCs in the Northern Hemisphere. Instead, there is remarkable consistency in the structure of reanalyzed wind profiles around TCs. This is evident in the distributions of two new parameters describing the height and depth of vertical wind shear, which highlight a clear preference for shallow layers of upper-level shear. Many of the wind profiles tested in the idealized simulations have shear height or depth values on the tails of these distributions, suggesting that the environmental wind profiles around real TCs do not exhibit enough structural variability to have the clear statistical relationship to intensity change that we expected. In the final part of this dissertation, we use the reanalyzed TC environments to initialize ensembles of idealized simulations. Using a new modeling technique that allows for time-varying environments, these simulations examine the predictability implications of exposing a TC to different structures and magnitudes of vertical wind shear during its life cycle. We find that TCs in more deeply distributed vertical wind shear environments have a more uncertain intensity evolution than TCs exposed to shallower layers of upper-level shear. This higher uncertainty arises from a more marginal boundary layer environment that the deeply distributed shear establishes, which enhances the TC sensitivity to the magnitude of deep-layer shear. Simulated radar reflectivity also appears to evolve in a more uncertain fashion in environments with deeply distributed vertical shear. However, structural predictability timescales, computed as the time it takes for errors in the amplitude or phase of azimuthal asymmetries of reflectivity to saturate, are similar for wind profiles with shallow upper-level shear and deeply distributed shear. Both ensembles demonstrate predictability timescales of two to three days for the lowest azimuthal wavenumbers of amplitude and phase. As the magnitude of vertical wind shear increases to universally destructive levels, structural and intensity errors begin to decrease. Shallow upper-level shear primes the TC for a more pronounced recovery in the predictability of the wavenumber-one precipitation structure in stronger shear. The recovered low-wavenumber predictability of TC precipitation structure and the collapse in intensity spread in strong shear suggests that vertical wind shear is most effective at reducing TC predictability when its magnitude is near the threshold between favorable and unfavorable values and when it is deeply distributed through the troposphere. By isolating the effect of the environmental flow, the simulations and analyses in this dissertation offer a unique understanding of how vertical wind shear affects TCs. In particular, the results have important implications for designing and implementing future environmental observing strategies that will be critical for improving forecasts of these destructive storms.

Global Perspectives on Tropical Cyclones

Global Perspectives on Tropical Cyclones
Title Global Perspectives on Tropical Cyclones PDF eBook
Author Johnny C. L. Chan
Publisher World Scientific
Pages 445
Release 2010
Genre Science
ISBN 9814293482

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Pt. I. Theory of tropical cyclones. ch. 1. Tropical cyclone structure and dynamics / Jeffrey D. Kepert. ch. 2. Tropical cyclone formation / Kevin J. Tory and William M. Frank. ch. 3. Air-sea interactions in tropical cyclones / Lynn K. Shay. ch. 4. Movement of tropical cyclones / Johnny C.L. Chan. ch. 5. The extratropical transition of tropical cyclones : structural characteristics, downstream impacts, and forecast challenges / Patrick A. Harr -- pt. II. Observations of tropical cyclones. ch. 6. Observing and analyzing the near-surface wind field in tropical cyclones / Mark D. Powell. ch. 7. Satellite observations of tropical cyclones / Christopher Velden and Jeffrey Hawkins. ch. 8. Aircraft observations of tropical cyclones / Sim D. Aberson [und weitere] -- pt. III. Climate variations of tropical cyclone activity. ch. 9. Tropical cyclones and climate change : a review / Thomas Knutson, Chris Landsea and Kerry Emanuel -- pt. IV. Forecasting of tropical cyclones. ch. 10. Track and structure forecasts of tropical cyclones / Julian Heming and Jim Goerss. ch. 11. The influence of natural climate variability on tropical cyclones, and seasonal forecasts of tropical cyclone activity / Suzana J. Camargo [und weitere] -- pt. V. Hydrological aspects of tropical cyclones. ch. 12. Storm surge modeling and applications in coastal areas / Shishir K. Dube [und weitere] -- pt. VI. Societal impacts of tropical cyclones. ch. 13. Disaster mitigation and societal impacts / David King, Jim Davidson and Linda Anderson-Berry

Tropical Cyclone Intensity Analysis Using Satellite Data

Tropical Cyclone Intensity Analysis Using Satellite Data
Title Tropical Cyclone Intensity Analysis Using Satellite Data PDF eBook
Author Vernon F. Dvorak
Publisher
Pages 60
Release 1984
Genre Cyclone forecasting
ISBN

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Atmospheric Turbulence and Mesoscale Meteorology

Atmospheric Turbulence and Mesoscale Meteorology
Title Atmospheric Turbulence and Mesoscale Meteorology PDF eBook
Author Evgeni Fedorovich
Publisher Cambridge University Press
Pages 312
Release 2004-10-21
Genre Science
ISBN 9780521835886

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Leading researchers come together in this 2004 text to survey recent developments in atmospheric turbulence and mesoscale meteorology.

De wijze prins

De wijze prins
Title De wijze prins PDF eBook
Author
Publisher
Pages 7
Release 192?
Genre
ISBN

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Tropical Cyclones

Tropical Cyclones
Title Tropical Cyclones PDF eBook
Author Richard Anthes
Publisher Springer
Pages 228
Release 2016-06-29
Genre Science
ISBN 1935704281

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Tropical Cyclones and hurricanes, long feared for the death and destruction that often accompanies them, are among the most fascinating of atmospheric phenomena. Created by thermodynamic processes, they unleash vast amounts of energy and influence a wide variety of natural processes along their paths. Richard Anthes tells the story of tropical cyclones creation and destruction, of meteorology's successes in understanding, modeling and predicting their behavior, and of the attempts to modify them. The book begins with a lively introduction to hurricanes, their awesome power, and their effects on individuals and societies in the past and present. The characteristics of the mature hurricane are revealed by consideration of rawinsonde, aircraft and satellite data. The physical processes responsible for the development and maintenance of tropical cyclones are treated comprehensively, and illustrated with both qualitative and quantitative examples. The role of the planetary boundary layer, cumulus convection and radiation are all discussed in detail. Progress in numerical simulation of tropical cyclones is carefully reviewed. Modern, three-dimensional models succeed in simulating observed features such as the eye and spiral rain bands and in predicting storm motion over time intervals of three days. Current capabilities to predict and modify hurricanes and tropical cyclones are fully examined. The methods and difficulties of operational forecasting, the economic aspects of storm predictions, and the trends in accuracy of offical forecasts are all considered. The potential benefits and scientific problems associated with hurricane modification are discussed as part of a review of experimental and theoretical results on the consquences of seeding hurricane clouds. A unique feature of the book is a thorough treatment of the interactions between storm and ocean, with both observations and thery being integrated to provide a complete description.