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contributor authorTory, K. J.
contributor authorDavidson, N. E.
contributor authorMontgomery, M. T.
date accessioned2017-06-09T16:54:02Z
date available2017-06-09T16:54:02Z
date copyright2007/09/01
date issued2007
identifier issn0022-4928
identifier otherams-76204.pdf
identifier urihttp://onlinelibrary.yabesh.ir/handle/yetl/4218626
description abstractThis is the third of a three-part investigation into tropical cyclone (TC) genesis in the Australian Bureau of Meteorology?s Tropical Cyclone Limited Area Prediction System (TC-LAPS), an operational numerical weather prediction (NWP) forecast model. In Parts I and II, a primary and two secondary vortex enhancement mechanisms were illustrated, and shown to be responsible for TC genesis in a simulation of TC Chris. In this paper, five more TC-LAPS simulations are investigated: three developing and two nondeveloping. In each developing simulation the pathway to genesis was essentially the same as that reported in Part II. Potential vorticity (PV) cores developed through low- to middle-tropospheric vortex enhancement in model-resolved updraft cores (primary mechanism) and interacted to form larger cores through diabatic upscale vortex cascade (secondary mechanism). On the system scale, vortex intensification resulted from the large-scale mass redistribution forced by the upward mass flux, driven by diabatic heating, in the updraft cores (secondary mechanism). The nondeveloping cases illustrated that genesis can be hampered by (i) vertical wind shear, which may tilt and tear apart the PV cores as they develop, and (ii) an insufficient large-scale cyclonic environment, which may fail to sufficiently confine the warming and enhanced cyclonic winds, associated with the atmospheric adjustment to the convective updrafts. The exact detail of the vortex interactions was found to be unimportant for qualitative genesis forecast success. Instead the critical ingredients were found to be sufficient net deep convection in a sufficiently cyclonic environment in which vertical shear was less than some destructive limit. The often-observed TC genesis pattern of convection convergence, where the active convective regions converge into a 100-km-diameter center, prior to an intense convective burst and development to tropical storm intensity is evident in the developing TC-LAPS simulations. The simulations presented in this study and numerous other simulations not yet reported on have shown good qualitative forecast success. Assuming such success continues in a more rigorous study (currently under way) it could be argued that TC genesis is largely predictable provided the large-scale environment (vorticity, vertical shear, and convective forcing) is sufficiently resolved and initialized.
publisherAmerican Meteorological Society
titlePrediction and Diagnosis of Tropical Cyclone Formation in an NWP System. Part III: Diagnosis of Developing and Nondeveloping Storms
typeJournal Paper
journal volume64
journal issue9
journal titleJournal of the Atmospheric Sciences
identifier doi10.1175/JAS4023.1
journal fristpage3195
journal lastpage3213
treeJournal of the Atmospheric Sciences:;2007:;Volume( 064 ):;issue: 009
contenttypeFulltext


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