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Do tropical cyclones intensify by WISHE?
Author(s) -
Montgomery Michael T.,
Sang Nguyen Van,
Smith Roger K.,
Persing John
Publication year - 2009
Publication title -
quarterly journal of the royal meteorological society
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.744
H-Index - 143
eISSN - 1477-870X
pISSN - 0035-9009
DOI - 10.1002/qj.459
Subject(s) - eye , tropical cyclone , convection , vortex , meteorology , climatology , environmental science , sea surface temperature , vorticity , atmospheric sciences , wind speed , geology , precipitation , dropsonde , storm , extratropical cyclone , physics
In this paper we seek and obtain a basic understanding of tropical cyclone intensification in three dimensions when precipitation and evaporative‐cooling (warm rain) processes are included. Intensification with warm rain physics included is found to be dominated by highly localized deep convective structures possessing strong cyclonic vorticity in their cores—dubbed ‘Vortical Hot Towers’ (VHTs). Unlike previous studies, the findings herein suggest an intensification pathway that is distinct from the ‘evaporation–wind’ feedback mechanism known as wind‐induced surface heat exchange (WISHE), which requires a positive feedback between the azimuthal‐mean boundary‐layer equivalent potential temperature and the azimuthal‐mean surface wind speed underneath the eyewall of the storm. Intensification from a finite‐amplitude initial vortex is shown to not require this evaporation–wind feedback process. Indeed, when the surface wind speed in the sea‐to‐air vapour fluxes is capped at a nominal (trade‐wind) value, the vortex still intensifies by the same pathway identified in the main experiments via the generation of locally buoyant VHTs and the near‐surface convergence that the VHTs induce within the boundary layer. The present findings and interpretations challenge the prevailing view that tropical cyclones are premier examples of vortical systems arising from WISHE. Given the potential significance on our understanding of the dynamics of hurricanes, and given the limitations of the present modelling framework, further tests of these predictions are advocated. Copyright © 2009 Royal Meteorological Society

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