This study uses a coupled atmosphere-ocean model with different numerical settings to investigate the mean and eddy momentum transfer processes responsible for Typhoon Muifa's (2011) early rapid intensification (RI). Three experiments are conducted. Two use the coupled model with a horizontal resolution of either 1 km (HRL) or 3 km (LRL). The third (NoTCFB) is the same as LRL but excludes tropical cyclone (TC)-induced sea-surface temperature (SST) cooling. HRL reasonably reproduces Muifa's intensity during its rapid intensification and weakening periods. The azimuthal mean tangential and radial momentum budgets are analysed before the RI rates diverge between HRL and LRL. Results show that the dominant processes responsible for Muifa's inte...
The European Centre for Medium-Range Weather Forecasts Tropical Ocean–Global Atmosphere advanced ana...
We analyse a tropical cyclone simulated for a realistic ocean-eddy field using the global, nonhydros...
Tropical cyclones are complex systems that are challenging to forecast and model. Since tropical cyc...
The hypothesis that a warm ocean feature (WOF) such as a warm eddy may cause a passing typhoon to un...
The ocean temperature (especially the Sea Surface Temperature (SST)) is very important to the format...
A Multi-Quadric (MQ) analysis is developed and compared with the four-dimensional data assimilation ...
Landfalling tropical cyclones bring tremendous coastal and inland hazard, which depends strongly on ...
It is well-recognized that tropical cyclone (TC) intensity is strongly modulated by air-sea interact...
A tropical cyclone (TC) usually induces strong sea-surface cooling due to vertical mixing. In turn, ...
Tropical cyclone (TC) intensity change is governed by internal dynamics (e.g. eyewall contraction, e...
Capturing TC intensity change remains a great challenge for most state-of-the-art operational foreca...
Tropical cyclones (TCs) often change intensity as they move over mesoscale oceanic features, as a fu...
It is well recognized that air-sea interaction affects the development and modulation of tropical cy...
The key physical processes responsible for inner-core structural changes and associated fluctuations...
Tropical cyclone (TC) rapid intensification (RI) is usually accompanied by a rapid eyewall contracti...
The European Centre for Medium-Range Weather Forecasts Tropical Ocean–Global Atmosphere advanced ana...
We analyse a tropical cyclone simulated for a realistic ocean-eddy field using the global, nonhydros...
Tropical cyclones are complex systems that are challenging to forecast and model. Since tropical cyc...
The hypothesis that a warm ocean feature (WOF) such as a warm eddy may cause a passing typhoon to un...
The ocean temperature (especially the Sea Surface Temperature (SST)) is very important to the format...
A Multi-Quadric (MQ) analysis is developed and compared with the four-dimensional data assimilation ...
Landfalling tropical cyclones bring tremendous coastal and inland hazard, which depends strongly on ...
It is well-recognized that tropical cyclone (TC) intensity is strongly modulated by air-sea interact...
A tropical cyclone (TC) usually induces strong sea-surface cooling due to vertical mixing. In turn, ...
Tropical cyclone (TC) intensity change is governed by internal dynamics (e.g. eyewall contraction, e...
Capturing TC intensity change remains a great challenge for most state-of-the-art operational foreca...
Tropical cyclones (TCs) often change intensity as they move over mesoscale oceanic features, as a fu...
It is well recognized that air-sea interaction affects the development and modulation of tropical cy...
The key physical processes responsible for inner-core structural changes and associated fluctuations...
Tropical cyclone (TC) rapid intensification (RI) is usually accompanied by a rapid eyewall contracti...
The European Centre for Medium-Range Weather Forecasts Tropical Ocean–Global Atmosphere advanced ana...
We analyse a tropical cyclone simulated for a realistic ocean-eddy field using the global, nonhydros...
Tropical cyclones are complex systems that are challenging to forecast and model. Since tropical cyc...