Abstract
This study investigates the composite extratropical flow response to recurving western North Pacific tropical cyclones (WNP TCs), and the dependence of this response on the strength of the TC-extratropical flow interaction as defined by the negative potential vorticity advection (PV) by the irrotational wind associated with the TC. The 2.5° NCEP-NCARreanalysis is used to construct composite analyses of all 1979-2009 recurving WNP TCs and of subsets that undergo strong and weak TC-extratropical flow interactions. Findings indicate that recurving WNP TCs are associated with the amplification of a preexisting Rossby wave train (RWT) that disperses downstream and modifies the large-scale flow pattern over North America. ThisRWT affects approximately 240° of longitude and persists for approximately 10 days. Recurving TCs associated with strong TC-extratropical flow interactions are associated with a stronger extratropical flow response than those associated with weak TC-extratropical flow interactions. Compared with weak interactions, strong interactions feature a more distinct upstreamtrough, stronger and broader divergent outflow associated with stronger midlevel frontogenesis and forcing for ascent over and northeast of the TC, and stronger upper-level PV frontogenesis that promotes more pronounced jet streak intensification. During strong interactions, divergent outflow helps anchor and amplify a downstream ridge, thereby amplifying a preexisting RWT from Asia that disperses downstream to North America. In contrast, during weak interactions, divergent outflow weakly amplifies a downstream ridge, such that a RWT briefly amplifies in situ before dissipating over the western-central North Pacific.
| Original language | English |
|---|---|
| Pages (from-to) | 1122-1141 |
| Number of pages | 20 |
| Journal | Monthly Weather Review |
| Volume | 143 |
| Issue number | 4 |
| DOIs | |
| State | Published - 2015 |
Keywords
- Diabatic heating
- Intraseasonal variability
- Jets
- Potential vorticity
- Rossby waves
- Tropical cyclones
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