Publication | Closed Access
Horizontal Transition of Turbulent Cascade in the Near-Surface Layer of Tropical Cyclones
24
Citations
40
References
2015
Year
Storm SurgeTropical CyclonesEngineeringStorm CenterTurbulenceBoundary LayerEarth ScienceGeophysicsStorm DynamicsAtmospheric ScienceMicrometeorologyTc Energy DynamicsMeteorologyMesoscale MeteorologyGeographyClimate DynamicsClimatologyTurbulent CascadeHurricane RiskSubgrid ModelsTurbulence ModelingAtmospheric TransportHorizontal TransitionMeteorological ForcingAerodynamics
Abstract Tropical cyclones (TC) consist of a large range of interacting scales from hundreds of kilometers to a few meters. The energy transportation among these different scales—that is, from smaller to larger scales (upscale) or vice versa (downscale)—may have profound impacts on TC energy dynamics as a result of the associated changes in available energy sources and sinks. From multilayer tower measurements in the low-level (<120 m) boundary layer of several landing TCs, the authors found there are two distinct regions where the energy flux changes from upscale to downscale as a function of distance to the storm center. The boundary between these two regions is approximately 1.5 times the radius of maximum wind. Two-dimensional turbulence (upscale cascade) occurs more typically at regions close to the inner-core region of TCs, while 3D turbulence (downscale cascade) mostly occurs at the outer-core region in the surface layer.
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