Some of the classical models of tropical cyclone intensification predict tropical cyclones to intensify up to a steady intensity, which depends on surface fluxes only, without any relevant role played by convective motions in the troposphere, typically assumed to have a moist adiabatic lapse rate. Simulations performed using the non-hydrostatic, high-resolution model System for Atmosphere Modeling in idealized settings (rotating radiative-convective equilibrium on a doubly periodic domain) show early intensification consistent with these theoretical expectations, but different intensity evolution, with the cyclone undergoing an oscillation in wind speed. This oscillation can be linked to feedbacks between the cyclone intensity and air buoyancy: convective heating, radiative heating, and mixing with warm low stratospheric air warm the mid and upper troposphere of the cyclone stabilizing the air column and thus reducing its intensity. After the intensity decay phase, mid and upper tropospheric cooling, mostly through cold advection from the surroundings, cooled by radiation, rebuilds Convective Available Potential Energy, that peaks just before a new intensification phase. These idealized simulations thus highlight the potentially important interactions between a tropical cyclone, its environment and radiation.

Polesello, A., Charinti, G., Meroni, A., Muller, C., Pasquero, C. (2025). Intensity Oscillations of Tropical Cyclones: Surface Versus Mid and Upper Tropospheric Processes. JOURNAL OF ADVANCES IN MODELING EARTH SYSTEMS, 17(4) [10.1029/2024MS004613].

Intensity Oscillations of Tropical Cyclones: Surface Versus Mid and Upper Tropospheric Processes

Meroni A. N.;Pasquero C.
2025

Abstract

Some of the classical models of tropical cyclone intensification predict tropical cyclones to intensify up to a steady intensity, which depends on surface fluxes only, without any relevant role played by convective motions in the troposphere, typically assumed to have a moist adiabatic lapse rate. Simulations performed using the non-hydrostatic, high-resolution model System for Atmosphere Modeling in idealized settings (rotating radiative-convective equilibrium on a doubly periodic domain) show early intensification consistent with these theoretical expectations, but different intensity evolution, with the cyclone undergoing an oscillation in wind speed. This oscillation can be linked to feedbacks between the cyclone intensity and air buoyancy: convective heating, radiative heating, and mixing with warm low stratospheric air warm the mid and upper troposphere of the cyclone stabilizing the air column and thus reducing its intensity. After the intensity decay phase, mid and upper tropospheric cooling, mostly through cold advection from the surroundings, cooled by radiation, rebuilds Convective Available Potential Energy, that peaks just before a new intensification phase. These idealized simulations thus highlight the potentially important interactions between a tropical cyclone, its environment and radiation.
Articolo in rivista - Articolo scientifico
CAPE in tropical cyclones; cyclone intensity; intensity oscillations; radiation in tropical cyclones;
English
21-apr-2025
2025
17
4
e2024MS004613
none
Polesello, A., Charinti, G., Meroni, A., Muller, C., Pasquero, C. (2025). Intensity Oscillations of Tropical Cyclones: Surface Versus Mid and Upper Tropospheric Processes. JOURNAL OF ADVANCES IN MODELING EARTH SYSTEMS, 17(4) [10.1029/2024MS004613].
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/10281/553738
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