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Influence of upper ocean stratification interannual variability on tropical cyclones

Influence of upper ocean stratification interannual variability on tropical cyclones
Influence of upper ocean stratification interannual variability on tropical cyclones
Climate modes, such as the El Niño Southern Oscillation (ENSO), influence Tropical Cyclones (TCs) interannual activity through their effect on large-scale atmospheric environment. These climate modes also induce interannual variations of subsurface oceanic stratification, which may also influence TCs. Changes in oceanic stratification indeed modulate the amplitude of TCs-induced cooling, and hence the negative feedback of air-sea interactions on the TC intensity. Here we use a dynamical downscaling approach that couples an axisymmetric TC model to a simple ocean model to quantify this interannual oceanic control on TC activity. We perform twin experiments with contrasted oceanic stratifications representative of interannual variability in each TC-prone region. While subsurface oceanic variations do not significantly affect the number of moderate (Category 3 or less) TCs, they do induce a 30% change of Category 5 TC-days globally, and a 70% change for TCs exceeding 85 m s-1. TCs in the western Pacific and the southwestern Indian Ocean are most sensitive to oceanic interannual variability (with a ~10 m s-1 modulation of the intensity of strongest storms at low latitude), owing to large upper ocean variations in response to ENSO. These results imply that a representation of ocean stratification variability should benefit operational forecasts of intense TCs and the understanding of their climatic variability.
tropical cyclone activity, upper ocean stratification, interannual variability, ENSO, intense hurricanes
1942-2466
680-699
Vincent, Emmanuel M.
06aa233c-bb5e-438e-8672-7a53b826e014
Emanuel, Kerry A.
1aa8f17e-2df0-492d-879c-7c262b599346
Lengaigne, Matthieu
3f78eafe-bcd2-41c4-9e0e-3b8bb3c55aa4
Vialard, Jérôme
165dd2c7-d5ec-4bd6-9f20-02e182e38f36
Madec, Gurvan
ffb28deb-4bbd-4a4c-914f-492f813e4864
Vincent, Emmanuel M.
06aa233c-bb5e-438e-8672-7a53b826e014
Emanuel, Kerry A.
1aa8f17e-2df0-492d-879c-7c262b599346
Lengaigne, Matthieu
3f78eafe-bcd2-41c4-9e0e-3b8bb3c55aa4
Vialard, Jérôme
165dd2c7-d5ec-4bd6-9f20-02e182e38f36
Madec, Gurvan
ffb28deb-4bbd-4a4c-914f-492f813e4864

Vincent, Emmanuel M., Emanuel, Kerry A., Lengaigne, Matthieu, Vialard, Jérôme and Madec, Gurvan (2014) Influence of upper ocean stratification interannual variability on tropical cyclones. Journal of Advances in Modeling Earth Systems, 6 (3), 680-699. (doi:10.1002/2014MS000327).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Climate modes, such as the El Niño Southern Oscillation (ENSO), influence Tropical Cyclones (TCs) interannual activity through their effect on large-scale atmospheric environment. These climate modes also induce interannual variations of subsurface oceanic stratification, which may also influence TCs. Changes in oceanic stratification indeed modulate the amplitude of TCs-induced cooling, and hence the negative feedback of air-sea interactions on the TC intensity. Here we use a dynamical downscaling approach that couples an axisymmetric TC model to a simple ocean model to quantify this interannual oceanic control on TC activity. We perform twin experiments with contrasted oceanic stratifications representative of interannual variability in each TC-prone region. While subsurface oceanic variations do not significantly affect the number of moderate (Category 3 or less) TCs, they do induce a 30% change of Category 5 TC-days globally, and a 70% change for TCs exceeding 85 m s-1. TCs in the western Pacific and the southwestern Indian Ocean are most sensitive to oceanic interannual variability (with a ~10 m s-1 modulation of the intensity of strongest storms at low latitude), owing to large upper ocean variations in response to ENSO. These results imply that a representation of ocean stratification variability should benefit operational forecasts of intense TCs and the understanding of their climatic variability.

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More information

Published date: September 2014
Keywords: tropical cyclone activity, upper ocean stratification, interannual variability, ENSO, intense hurricanes
Organisations: Marine Systems Modelling

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 370758
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/370758
ISSN: 1942-2466
PURE UUID: be09c66e-d7a6-4d86-a21c-4c633f55e6bb

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Date deposited: 06 Nov 2014 09:51
Last modified: 14 Mar 2024 18:21

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Contributors

Author: Emmanuel M. Vincent
Author: Kerry A. Emanuel
Author: Matthieu Lengaigne
Author: Jérôme Vialard
Author: Gurvan Madec

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