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contributor authorGiorgio Sarro
contributor authorClark Evans
date accessioned2023-04-12T18:36:17Z
date available2023-04-12T18:36:17Z
date copyright2022/11/03
date issued2022
identifier otherMWR-D-22-0088.1.pdf
identifier urihttp://yetl.yabesh.ir/yetl1/handle/yetl/4289954
description abstractThe transformation stage of extratropical transition characterizes the process by which a tropical cyclone transforms into an extratropical cyclone at higher latitudes in a cooler, more baroclinic environment. A 2006 study connects extremes in transformation-stage duration, post-transformation intensity change, and post-transformation thermal structure for North Atlantic basin tropical cyclones to synoptic-scale environmental variability. However, the 2006 study’s findings are derived from coarse atmospheric analyses that include fictitious tropical cyclone vortices applied to small samples with substantial variability between cases. This study updates the 2006 study’s findings using larger sample sizes, improvements in atmospheric reanalysis resolution and fidelity, and advances in scientific understanding over the last two decades. Transformation-stage duration is primarily a function of the duration that a transforming cyclone remains in an environment supportive of tropical development after entering a region supportive of baroclinic development. Post-transformation intensity-change composites are distinguished primarily by whether proper phasing is achieved between the transforming cyclone and upstream trough following the transformation stage. Finally, post-transformation thermal structure is distinguished primarily by whether the transforming cyclone moves into a strongly confluent synoptic-scale environment following the transformation stage. This study also presents the first composite analyses of North Atlantic tropical cyclones that maintain a lower-tropospheric warm-core structure post-transformation, termed instant warm-seclusion cyclones, which have previously only been diagnosed in case studies of individual North Atlantic tropical cyclones and for a limited climatology of western North Pacific tropical cyclones. These cyclones, comprising approximately one-third of all cases, are characterized by the transforming TC becoming negatively tilted with respect to the upstream trough and undergoing cyclonic Rossby wave breaking.
publisherAmerican Meteorological Society
titleAn Updated Investigation of Post-Transformation Intensity, Structural, and Duration Extremes for Extratropically Transitioning North Atlantic Tropical Cyclones
typeJournal Paper
journal volume150
journal issue11
journal titleMonthly Weather Review
identifier doi10.1175/MWR-D-22-0088.1
journal fristpage2911
journal lastpage2933
page2911–2933
treeMonthly Weather Review:;2022:;volume( 150 ):;issue: 011
contenttypeFulltext


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