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Balanced Contribution to the Intensification of a Tropical Cyclone Simulated in TCM4: Outer-Core Spinup Process*
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Citations
40
References
2010
Year
MeteorologyStorm SurgeEngineeringHurricane RiskStorm DynamicsAtmospheric ScienceSolar ConvectionMeteorological ForcingTropical CycloneAbsolute Angular MomentumTropical Cyclone SimulatedAtmospheric ModelGeophysical FlowBalanced ContributionEarth ScienceClimate Dynamics
Abstract The balanced contribution to the intensification of a tropical cyclone simulated in the three-dimensional, nonhydrostatic, full-physics tropical cyclone model version 4 (TCM4), in particular the spinup of the outer-core circulation, is investigated by solving the Sawyer–Eliassen equation and by computing terms in the azimuthal-mean tangential wind tendency equation. Results demonstrate that the azimuthal-mean secondary circulation (radial and vertical circulation) and the spinup of the midtropospheric outer-core circulation in the simulated tropical cyclone are well captured by balance dynamics. The midtropospheric inflow develops in response to diabatic heating in mid–upper-tropospheric stratiform (anvil) clouds outside the eyewall in active spiral rainbands and transports absolute angular momentum inward to spin up the outer-core circulation. Although the azimuthal-mean diabatic heating rate in the eyewall is the largest, its contribution to radial winds and thus the spinup of outer-core circulation in the middle troposphere is rather weak. This is because the high inertial stability in the inner-core region resists the radial inflow in the middle troposphere, limiting the inward transport of absolute angular momentum. The result thus suggests that diabatic heating in spiral rainbands is the key to the continued growth of the storm-scale circulation.
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