4.4 Article

Onset of Tropical Cyclone Rapid Intensification: Evaluating the Response to Length Scales of Sea Surface Temperature Anomalies

Journal

JOURNAL OF THE ATMOSPHERIC SCIENCES
Volume 80, Issue 8, Pages 1971-1994

Publisher

AMER METEOROLOGICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1175/JAS-D-22-0158.1

Keywords

Atmosphere; Ocean; Hurricanes; typhoons; Mesoscale processes; Storm environments; Surface temperature

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This study investigates the influence of sea surface temperature (SST) anomalies on the rapid intensification of tropical cyclones. It finds that SST anomalies' size and magnitude, as well as their length scale and storm translation speed, play crucial roles in modulating the timing of rapid intensification onset.
Predicting the rapid intensification (.15.0 m s21 increase in 10 m wind speed over 24 h or less) of tropical cyclones (TC) remains a challenge in the broader context of numerical weather prediction largely due to their multiscale dynamics. Ocean observations show that the size and magnitude of sea surface temperature (SST) anomalies associated with cold wakes and ocean eddies play important roles in TC dynamics. In this study, a combination of spectral and struc-ture function analyses is utilized to generate realistic realizations of multiscale anomalies characteristic of the SST condi-tions in which Hurricane Irma (2017) underwent rapid intensification (RI). We investigate the impact of the length scale of these SST anomalies and the role of translation speed on the variance in RI onset timing. Length-scale-induced convective asymmetries, in addition to the mean magnitude of SST anomalies beneath the storm eye, are shown to modulate the vari-ance in RI onset timing. The size of the associated SST length scales relative to the storm size is critical to the magnitude of variance in RI onset timing, as smaller length scales are shown to lack the spatial extent required to induce preferential convective asymmetries. Storm translation speed is also shown to influence the variance in RI onset timing for larger -length-scale ensembles by altering the exposure time of the eye to these SST anomalies. We find that an interplay between SST-induced convective asymmetries, the magnitude of SST anomalies underneath the eye/eyewall, and storm translation speed play crucial roles in modulating the variance in RI onset timing.SIGNIFICANCE STATEMENT: The characteristics of sea surface temperature (SST) anomalies in the tropical cyclone near-environment are inherently multiscale in nature as a result of interactions between various dynamical processes in the ocean. Assuming a uniform SST beneath storms in numerical simulations limits the predictability of how air-sea interaction affects the physics of rapid intensification (RI). In this study, the influence of realistic multiscale SST anomalies on RI onset timing is investigated. Our results suggest that the length scale of SST anomalies (in addi-tion to its magnitude) modulate the distribution of convection, creating asymmetries around the RMW that can influ-ence the predictability of RI onset. This effect is further modulated by storm translation speed, with the most prominent impact seen in slow-moving storms.

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