J11B.3 Satellite-Based Observations of Air-Sea Interaction Impacts on Extratropical Cyclone and Atmospheric River Mesoscale Development

Wednesday, 31 January 2024: 2:15 PM
316 (The Baltimore Convention Center)
Juan A. Crespo, UCLA, Los Angeles, CA; JPL, Pasadena, CA; and C. M. Naud, R. Luna-Niño, and D. J. Posselt, PhD

Latent and sensible heat fluxes (LHF and SHF, respectively) within the marine boundary layer are believed to play a significant role in the genesis and evolution of Extratropical Cyclones (ETCs) and Atmospheric Rivers (ARs); ARs are often associated with ETCs in the midlatitudes. However, consistent observations of air-sea interactions with in-situ observatories are limited in both time and space, and traditional polar orbiting satellites may miss large swaths in the lower midlatitudes due to their orbits, leading to daily gaps in coverage where the strongest fluxes often occur and change rapidly. Satellite missions like CYGNSS (Cyclone Global Navigation Satellite System) have filled in data gaps by providing improved observations over the lower midlatitudes of air-sea interactions. These improved observations of air-sea processes, coupled with observations of cloud and precipitation structure within ETCs and ARs from other satellites, like GPM and MODIS, can help one begin to link the correlations between surface heat fluxes to changes of the mesoscale features within these synoptic-scale systems. Previous studies have shown the correlation of observed surface heat fluxes to increases in precipitation and cloud thickness along the frontal regions, but they have only looked at the connections between ETCs and ARs when LHF and SHF were at their strongest and/or at the peak intensity of the system, not during its early formation (or just before formation) when they may be at their strongest. This presentation will highlight the role air-sea interactions may have during the genesis and early evolution of ETCs and ARs, the correlations to cloud and precipitation structure changes, and setting the groundwork that will be able to show that air-sea interactions directly impact the development of these systems.
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