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Tropical Cyclogenesis From Self‐Aggregated Convection in Numerical Simulations of Rotating Radiative‐Convective Equilibrium
Author(s) -
Carstens Jacob D.,
Wing Allison A.
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
journal of advances in modeling earth systems
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 3.03
H-Index - 58
ISSN - 1942-2466
DOI - 10.1029/2019ms002020
Subject(s) - tropical cyclogenesis , cyclogenesis , convection , radiative transfer , tropical cyclone , atmospheric sciences , climatology , mesoscale meteorology , vortex , environmental science , physics , forcing (mathematics) , geology , cyclone (programming language) , meteorology , computer hardware , quantum mechanics , field programmable gate array , computer science
Abstract In a modeled environment of rotating radiative‐convective equilibrium (RCE), convective self‐aggregation may take the form of spontaneous tropical cyclogenesis. We investigate the processes leading to tropical cyclogenesis in idealized simulations with a three‐dimensional cloud‐permitting model configured in rotating RCE, in which the background planetary vorticity is varied across f ‐plane cases to represent a range of deep tropical and near‐equatorial environments. Convection is initialized randomly in an otherwise homogeneous environment, with no background wind, precursor disturbance, or other synoptic‐scale forcing. We examine the dynamic and thermodynamic evolution of cyclogenesis in these experiments and compare the physical mechanisms to current theories. All simulations with planetary vorticity corresponding to latitudes from 10°–20° generate intense tropical cyclones, with maximum wind speeds of 80 m s −1 or above. Time to genesis varies widely, even within a five‐member ensemble of 20° simulations, indicating large stochastic variability. Shared across the 10°–20° group is the emergence of a midlevel vortex in the days leading to genesis, which has dynamic and thermodynamic implications on its environment that facilitate the spin‐up of a low‐level vortex. Tropical cyclogenesis is possible in this model at values of Coriolis parameter as low as that representative of 1°. In these experiments, convection self‐aggregates into a quasicircular cluster, which then begins to rotate and gradually strengthen into a tropical storm, aided by strong near‐surface inflow that is already established days prior. Other experiments at these lower Coriolis parameters instead self‐aggregate into a nonrotating elongated band and fail to undergo cyclogenesis over the 100‐day simulation.

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