Influence of air-sea coupling on Indian Ocean tropical cyclones

被引:23
作者
Lengaigne, Matthieu [1 ,2 ]
Neetu, S. [3 ]
Samson, Guillaume [4 ]
Vialard, Jerome [1 ]
Krishnamohan, K. S. [1 ]
Masson, Sebastien [1 ]
Jullien, Swen [5 ]
Suresh, I. [3 ]
Menkes, Christophe E. [1 ,6 ]
机构
[1] Univ Paris 06, UPMC, Sorbonne Univ, CNRS,IRD,MNHN,LOCEAN Lab,IPSL, Paris, France
[2] Natl Inst Oceanog, Joint Int Lab, IndoFrench Cell Water Sci, IISc,NIO,IITM,IRD, Panaji, Goa, India
[3] Natl Inst Oceanog, CSIR, Panaji, Goa, India
[4] Mercator Ocean, Ramonville St Agne, France
[5] Univ Brest, CNRS, IFREMER, LOPS,IRD,IUEM, Plouzane, France
[6] Ctr IRD, Noumea, New Caledonia
关键词
Tropical cyclones; Air-sea coupling; Indian Ocean; Cold wake; Regional coupled ocean-atmosphere model; POTENTIAL INTENSITY; ROSSBY WAVES; MODEL; CLIMATOLOGY; SIMULATION; BAY; VARIABILITY; HURRICANES; PREDICTION; IMPACT;
D O I
10.1007/s00382-018-4152-0
中图分类号
P4 [大气科学(气象学)];
学科分类号
0706 ; 070601 ;
摘要
This paper assesses the impact of air-sea coupling on Indian Ocean tropical cyclones (TCs) by comparing a 20-year long simulation of a 1/4 degrees regional coupled ocean-atmosphere model with a twin experiment, where the atmospheric component is forced by sea surface temperature from the coupled simulation. The coupled simulation reproduces the observed spatio-temporal TCs distribution and TC-induced surface cooling reasonably well, but overestimates the number of TCs. Air-sea coupling does not affect the cyclogenesis spatial distribution but reduces the number of TCs by 20% and yields a better-resolved bimodal seasonal distribution in the northern hemisphere. Coupling also affects intensity distribution, inducing a four-fold decrease in the proportion of intense TCs (Cat-2 and stronger). Air-sea coupling damps TCs growth through a reduction of inner-core upward enthalpy fluxes due to the TC-induced cooling. This reduction is particularly large for the most intense TCs of the northern Indian Ocean (up to 250Wm(-2)), due to higher ambient surface temperatures and larger TC-induced cooling there. The negative feedback of air-sea coupling on strongest TCs is mainly associated with slow-moving storms, which spend more time over the cold wake they induce. Sensitivity experiments using a different convective parameterization yield qualitatively similar results, with a larger (65%) reduction in the number of TCs. Because of their relatively coarse resolution (1/4 degrees), both set of experiments however fail to reproduce the most intenseobserved TCs. Further studies with finer resolution models in the Bay of Bengal will be needed to assess the expectedly large impact of air-sea coupling on those intense anddeadly TCs.
引用
收藏
页码:577 / 598
页数:22
相关论文
共 97 条
[91]   Ocean Preconditioning of Cyclone Nargis in the Bay of Bengal: Interaction between Rossby Waves, Surface Fresh Waters, and Sea Surface Temperatures [J].
Yu, Lisan ;
McPhaden, Michael J. .
JOURNAL OF PHYSICAL OCEANOGRAPHY, 2011, 41 (09) :1741-1755
[92]   Tropical Cyclone Intensity Errors Associated with Lack of Two-Way Ocean Coupling in High-Resolution Global Simulations [J].
Zarzycki, Colin M. .
JOURNAL OF CLIMATE, 2016, 29 (23) :8589-8610
[93]   Simulations of the Ocean Response to a Hurricane: Nonlinear Processes [J].
Zedler, Sarah E. .
JOURNAL OF PHYSICAL OCEANOGRAPHY, 2009, 39 (10) :2618-2634
[94]  
Zhu H, 2004, J ATMOS SCI, V61, DOI 10.1175/1520-0469(2004)061&LT
[95]  
1245:OEOTCI&GT
[96]  
2.0.CO
[97]  
2