14C.1
Hurricane Vortices in Baroclinic Environments
Christopher A. Davis, NCAR, Boulder, CO; and S. Jones
Simulations of several Atlantic hurricanes from 2005 to 2007 are diagnosed to understand the behavior of realistic vortices in varying environments during the process of extratropical transition (ET). The simulations were performed in real time using the Advanced Hurricane WRF model (AHW), using a moving, storm centered nest of either 4-km or 1.33-km grid-spacing. The simulations provide realistic evolution of asymmetric precipitation structures, implying control by the synoptic-scale, primarily through the vertical wind shear.
The magnitude of the vortex tilt with height increases with increasing shear, but it is not until the shear approaches 20 m/s that the total vortex circulation decreases. Furthermore, the total vertical mass flux is proportional to the shear for shears less than about 20-25 m/s, and therefore maximizes not in the tropical phase, but rather, during ET. This has potential implications for predicting hurricane-induced perturbations of the mid-latitude jet and its consequences on downstream predictability.
Hurricane vortices are found to resist shearing by either adjusting their vertical structure through precession (Helene 2006), forming an entirely new center (Irene 2005), or rapidly developing into a baroclinic cyclone in the presence of a favourable upper-tropospheric disturbance (Maria 2005, Noel 2007). Vortex resiliency is found to have a substantial diabatic contribution whereby vertical tilt is reduced through reduction of the primary vortex asymmetry induced by the shear. If the shear and tilt are so large that upshear subsidence overwhelms the symmetric vertical circulation of the hurricane, latent heating and precipitation will occur to the left of the tilt vector and slow precession. Such was apparent during Wilma (2005).
Recorded presentationSession 14C, Tropical Cyclone Structure III: Inner Core
Thursday, 1 May 2008, 10:15 AM-12:00 PM, Palms H
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