4.4 Article

Roles of Barotropic Instability across the Moat in Inner Eyewall Decay and Outer Eyewall Intensification: Essential Dynamics

Journal

JOURNAL OF THE ATMOSPHERIC SCIENCES
Volume 78, Issue 5, Pages 1411-1428

Publisher

AMER METEOROLOGICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1175/JAS-D-20-0169.1

Keywords

Instability; Waves; atmospheric; Hurricanes; typhoons; Tropical cyclones; Numerical analysis; modeling

Funding

  1. Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada (NSERC)/Hydro-Quebec Industrial Research Chair (IRC) program
  2. National Center for Atmospheric Research
  3. National Science Foundation [1852977]

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This study explores the dynamics behind the evolution of the inner and outer eyewalls of tropical cyclones, emphasizing the importance of type-2 barotropic instability (BI) in influencing the inner eyewall decay. Nonlinear experiments show changes in angular momentum over the inner and outer eyewalls, originating solely from the eddy radial transport of eddy angular momentum, highlighting the significance of the nonlinearity of type-2 BI.
Intense tropical cyclones (TCs) often experience secondary eyewall formations and the ensuing eyewall replacement cycles. Better understanding of the underlying dynamics is crucial to make improvements to the TC intensity and structure forecasting. Radar imagery of some double-eyewall TCs and a real-case simulation study indicated that the barotropic instability (BI) across the moat (aka type-2 BI) may play a role in inner eyewall decay. A three-dimensional numerical study accompanying this paper pointed out that type-2 BI is able to withdraw the inner eyewall absolute angular momentum (AAM) and increase the outer eyewall AAM through the eddy radial transport of eddy AAM. This paper explores the reason why the eddy radial transport of eddy AAM is intrinsically nonzero. Linear and nonlinear shallow water experiments are performed and they produce expected evolutions under type-2 BI. It will be shown that only nonlinear experiments have changes in AAM over the inner and outer eyewalls, and the changes solely originate from the eddy radial transport of eddy AAM. This result highlights the importance of nonlinearity of type-2 BI. Based on the distribution of vorticity perturbations and the balanced-waves arguments, it will be demonstrated that the nonzero eddy radial transport of eddy AAM is an essential outcome from the intrinsic interaction between the mutually growing vortex Rossby waves across the moat under type-2 BI. The analyses of the most unstable mode support the findings and will further attribute the inner eyewall decay and outer eyewall intensification to the divergence and convergence of the eddy angular momentum flux, respectively.

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