Mechanisms for the generation of mesoscale vorticity features in tropical cyclone rainbands

Charmaine N. Franklin, Greg J. Holland, Peter T. May

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

41 Scopus citations

Abstract

A high-resolution tropical cyclone model with explicit cloud microphysics has been used to investigate the dynamics and energetics of tropical cyclone rainbands. Analysis of the vorticity interactions that occur within the simulated rainbands demonstrates that couplets of cyclonic-anticyclonic mesovortices can be produced in outer bands. The primary source of this vorticity is the upward tilting of system-generated horizontal vorticity by diabatic heating gradients. The vertical heating gradient in the stratiform cloud also creates a potential vorticity (PV) dipole that accelerates the tangential flow and develops a midlevel jet. The strength of the jet is enhanced by the vortex pair that is oriented radially across the rainband. The Fourier decomposition of the absolute vorticity field shows two counterpropagating vortex Rossby waves associated with the rainband. The wave located on the inner side of the band transports energy toward the vortex center. The outer wave is made up of high wavenumbers and uses the vorticity gradients generated by the rainband. The results support the hypothesis that the heating profile in the stratiform regions of rainbands generates cyclonic PV across the freezing level, which develops a midlevel jet. This mechanism creates a vorticity gradient that enables the propagation of vortex Rossby waves that could allow the rainbands to interact with the mean flow and potentially influence the evolution of the storm by contributing to the symmetric component of vorticity and the development of secondary eyewalls.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)2649-2669
Number of pages21
JournalMonthly Weather Review
Volume134
Issue number10
DOIs
StatePublished - Oct 2006

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