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contributor authorBao, Xuwei
contributor authorDavidson, Noel E.
contributor authorYu, Hui
contributor authorHankinson, Mai C. N.
contributor authorSun, Zhian
contributor authorRikus, Lawrence J.
contributor authorLiu, Jianyong
contributor authorYu, Zifeng
contributor authorWu, Dan
date accessioned2017-06-09T17:32:28Z
date available2017-06-09T17:32:28Z
date copyright2015/09/01
date issued2015
identifier issn0027-0644
identifier otherams-86957.pdf
identifier urihttp://onlinelibrary.yabesh.ir/handle/yetl/4230572
description abstractyphoon Fitow made landfall south of Shanghai, China, on 6 October 2013. During the following two days, precipitation in excess of 300 mm day?1 occurred 400 km to the north of the typhoon center. The rain-producing systems included (i) outward-spiraling rainbands, which developed in the storm?s north sector in favorable environmental wind shear, and (ii) frontal cloud as a result of coastal frontogenesis.Over the rain area, in addition to enhanced ascent, there were increases in low-level moisture, convective instability, and midlevel relative vorticity. There is evidence of a preconditioning period prior to the rain when midlevel subsidence and boundary layer moistening occurred. From analysis of low-level equivalent potential temperature the following observations were made: (i) after landfall, a cold, dry airstream wrapped into Fitow?s circulation from the north, limiting the inner-core rainfall and producing a cold-air boundary, and (ii) an extended warm, moist airstream from the east converged with the cold-air intrusion over the rain area.The heavy rain occurred as the large-scale flow reorganized. Major anticyclones developed over China and the North Pacific. At upper levels, a large-amplitude trough relocated over central China with the entrance to a southwesterly jet positioned near Shanghai. Back trajectories from the rain area indicate that four environmental interactions developed: (i) increasing midlevel injection of moist potential vorticity (PV) from Fitow?s circulation; (ii) low-level warm, moist inflow from the east; (iii) midlevel inflow from nearby Typhoon Danas; and (iv) decreasing mid- to upper-level injection of PV from the midlatitude trough. The authors propose that the resultant PV structure change provided a very favorable environment for the development of rain systems.
publisherAmerican Meteorological Society
titleDiagnostics for an Extreme Rain Event near Shanghai during the Landfall of Typhoon Fitow (2013)
typeJournal Paper
journal volume143
journal issue9
journal titleMonthly Weather Review
identifier doi10.1175/MWR-D-14-00241.1
journal fristpage3377
journal lastpage3405
treeMonthly Weather Review:;2015:;volume( 143 ):;issue: 009
contenttypeFulltext


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