Midlevel ventilation, or the flux of low-entropy air into the inner core of a tropical cyclone (TC), is a hypothesized mechanism by which environmental vertical wind shear can constrain a TC's intensity. An idealized framework is developed to assess how ventilation affects TC intensity via two pathways: downdrafts outside the eyewall and eddy fluxes directly into the eyewall. Three key aspects are found: ventilation has a detrimental effect on TC intensity by decreasing the maximum steady state intensity, imposing a minimum intensity below which a TC will unconditionally decay, and providing an upper ventilation bound beyond which no steady TC can exist.Based on the idealized framework, a ventilation index is derived that is equal to the environmental vertical wind shear times the midlevel entropy deficit divided by the potential intensity. The ventilation index has a strong influence on the presentday climatology of tropical cyclogenesis and the distribution of TC intensification. Additionally, changes in the ventilation index are also examined in general circulation models (GCMs) between the late 20th century and the late 22nd century. Individual GCMs indicate potential regional shifts in preferred locations of tropical cyclogenesis and changes in TC intensity statistics due to shifts in the seasonal ventilation index, but a statistically significant projection cannot be given. The GCMs do show a robust increase in the midlevel entropy deficit and potential intensity nearly everywhere in the tropics.Lastly, an axisymmetric model with parameterized ventilation is used to examine the sensitivity of TC intensity to the strength and location of the ventilation and to examine the findings of the idealized framework. Increasing the strength of the ventilation and placing the ventilation at lower to middle levels results in a greater decrease in the quasi-steady intensity, whereas upper-level ventilation has little effect on the intensity. For strong ventilation, an oscillatory intensity regime materializes and is tied to transient convective bursts and strong downdrafts into the boundary layer. The sensitivity of TC intensity to ventilation can be viewed in the context of a modified thermal wind relation or the fractional Carnot efficiency of the inner-core.
Ventilation-the flux of cooler, drier air into a tropical cyclone-has a pronounced influence on the observed statistics of tropical cyclogenesis and tropical cyclone intensification.
[1] A new pathway for the negative impact of ENSO on tropical North Atlantic (NAtl) storm activity is examined empirically. Anomalous tropospheric temperatures communicated from the Pacific by wave dynamics are hypothesized to impact storm development by affecting column stability relative to equilibrium with NAtl sea surface temperature (SST). This combines recent teleconnection theory with the role of tropospheric temperature-SST differences in hurricane intensity theory. An equilibrium principle component (EQ PC) in which NAtl SST and tropospheric temperature covary, explains most of their variance. A disequilibrium PC (DEQ PC), measuring column stability relative to SST, correlates highly with hurricane season indices for storm frequency and intensity. The hurricane season (Jun. -Nov.) DEQ PC is closely related to ENSO SST just prior to and within the season, consistent with NAtl SST not having had time to adjust to the teleconnected tropospheric warming from onsetting ENSO events. The EQPC is related to prior winter ENSO SST.
The sensitivity of tropical cyclone intensity to ventilation of cooler, drier air into the inner core is examined using an axisymmetric tropical cyclone model with parameterized ventilation. Sufficiently strong ventilation induces cooling of the upper-level warm core, a shift in the secondary circulation radially outward, and a decrease in the simulated intensity. Increasing the strength of the ventilation and placing the ventilation at middle to lower levels results in a greater decrease in the quasi-steady intensity, whereas upper-level ventilation has little effect on the intensity. For strong ventilation, an oscillatory intensity regime materializes and is tied to transient convective bursts and strong downdrafts into the boundary layer.The sensitivity of tropical cyclone intensity to ventilation can be viewed in the context of the mechanical efficiency of the inner core or a modified thermal wind relation. In the former, ventilation decreases the mechanical efficiency, as the generation of available potential energy is wasted by entropy mixing above the boundary layer. In the latter, ventilation weakens the eyewall entropy front, resulting in a decrease in the intensity by thermal wind arguments.The experiments also support the existence of a threshold ventilation beyond which a tropical cyclone cannot be maintained. Downdrafts overwhelm surface fluxes, leading to a precipitous drop in intensity and a severe degradation of structure in such a scenario. For a given amount of ventilation below the threshold, there exists a minimum initial intensity necessary for intensification to the quasi-steady intensity.
Understanding trends in large hail-producing environments is an important component of estimating hail risk. Here, we use two environmental parameters, the Large Hail Parameter and the Significant Hail Parameter, to assess trends in days with environments conducive for hail ≥5 cm. From 1979 to 2017, there has been an increase in days with favorable large hail environments in central and eastern portions of the U.S. This increase has been driven primarily by an increasing frequency of days with steep mid-tropospheric lapse rates and necessary combinations of instability and vertical wind shear for severe thunderstorms. Annual large hail environment area is significantly, positively correlated with (1) large hail report area east of the Rocky Mountains, and (2) large hail radar-derived area in the Midwest and Northeast. This evidence suggests that there may be an environmental fingerprint on increasing large hail risk and expanding this risk eastward.
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