Why Do Eastern North Pacific Hurricanes Intensify More and Faster than Their Western-Counterpart Typhoons with Less Ocean Energy? SCIE SCOPUS

Cited 0 time in WEB OF SCIENCE Cited 1 time in Scopus
Title
Why Do Eastern North Pacific Hurricanes Intensify More and Faster than Their Western-Counterpart Typhoons with Less Ocean Energy?
Author(s)
Moon, Il-Ju; Knutson, Thomas R.; Kim, Hye-Ji; Babanin, Alexander V.; Jeong, Jin Yong
KIOST Author(s)
Jeong, Jin Yong(정진용)
Alternative Author(s)
정진용
Publication Year
2022-11
Abstract
Tropical cyclones operate as heat engines, deriving energy from the thermodynamic disequilibrium between ocean surfaces and atmosphere. Available energy for the cyclones comes primarily from upper-ocean heat content. Here, we show that eastern North Pacific hurricanes reach a given intensity 15% faster on average than western North Pacific typhoons despite having half the available ocean heat content. Eastern North Pacific hurricanes also intensify on average 16% more with a given ocean energy (i.e., air–sea enthalpy flux) than western North Pacific typhoons. As efficient intensifiers, eastern Pacific hurricanes remain small during their intensification period, tend to stay at lower latitudes, and are affected by relatively lower vertical wind shear, a colder troposphere, and a drier boundary layer. Despite a shallower warm upper-ocean layer in the eastern North Pacific, average hurricane-induced sea surface cooling there is only slightly larger than in the western North Pacific due to the opposing influences of stronger density stratification, smaller size, and related wave-interaction effects. In contrast, western North Pacific typhoons encounter a more favorable oceanic environment for development, but several factors cause typhoons to greatly increase their size during intensification, resulting in a slow and inefficient intensification process. These findings on tropical cyclones’ basin-dependent characteristics contribute toward a better understanding of TC intensification. ©2022 American Meteorological Society.
ISSN
0003-0007
URI
https://sciwatch.kiost.ac.kr/handle/2020.kiost/43624
DOI
10.1175/BAMS-D-21-0131.1
Bibliographic Citation
Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society, v.103, no.11, pp.E2604 - E2627, 2022
Publisher
American Meteorological Society
Keywords
Atmosphere-ocean interaction; Hurricanes/typhoons; Mixing; Ocean models; Thermodynamics; Wind waves
Type
Article
Language
English
Document Type
Article
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