
Effects of Diabatic Heating and Cooling in the Rapid Filamentation Zone on Structure and Intensity of a Simulated Tropical Cyclone
Author(s) -
Qingqing Li,
Yuqing Wang,
Yihong Duan
Publication year - 2014
Publication title -
journal of the atmospheric sciences
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.853
H-Index - 173
eISSN - 1520-0469
pISSN - 0022-4928
DOI - 10.1175/jas-d-13-0312.1
Subject(s) - diabatic , inner core , filamentation , tropical cyclone , convection , atmospheric sciences , core (optical fiber) , intensity (physics) , mechanics , meteorology , geology , climatology , environmental science , physics , geophysics , adiabatic process , thermodynamics , plasma , optics , quantum mechanics
The effects of diabatic heating and cooling in the rapid filamentation zone (RFZ), within which inner rainbands are often active, on tropical cyclone (TC) structure and intensity are investigated based on idealized numerical experiments using a cloud-resolving TC model (TCM4). The results show that removal of heating (cooling) in the RFZ would reduce (increase) the TC intensity. Diabatic heating in the RFZ plays an important role in increasing the inner-core size whereas diabatic cooling tends to limit the inner-core size increase or even reduce the inner-core size of a TC. Removal of both diabatic heating and cooling in the RFZ greatly suppresses the activity of inner rainbands but leads to the quasi-periodic development of a convective ring immediately outside of the inner core. A similar convective ring also develops in an experiment with the removal of diabatic heating only in the RFZ. With diabatic cooling removed only in the RFZ, an annular-hurricane-like structure arises with the outer rainbands largely suppressed.