The 2001 Atlantic hurricane season provides a broad spectrum of TC lifecycles including Cape Verde storms (Chantal, Erin, Felix), central Atlantic baroclinic developments (Lorenzo, Noel, Olga), and Gulf of Mexico hurricanes (Allison, Barry, Gabrielle). Five 2001 systems made landfall in North America, and several (including the damaging Michelle) impacted CentralAmerica and the Carribean. Six of the TCs transitioned to extratropical systems, including Karen, which had previously undergone a tropical transition. Salient features of each of the TCs' lifecycles will be identified, and the storms classified and diagnosed according to the structures and mechanisms present at different stages of their evolutions.
Common features will be used as a baseline for a set of simulations designed to develop a coherent, high resolution dataset for each of the 2001 Atlantic TCs. In conjunction with global analyses, these simulations will allow for an investigation of the systems' lifecycles over a broad range of scales. Employing the diagnostic approaches and conceptual models of recent TC studies, such a description of 2001 Atlantic storms will provide insight into the lifecycles of these severe weather events.
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