Numerical studies of tropical convection

Idealized numerical model experiments are presented to investigate the convective generation of vertical vorticity in a tropical depression. The calculations are motivated by observations made during the recent PREDICT field experiment to study tropical cyclogenesis, and by a desire to understand...

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Main Author: Kilroy, Gerard
Format: Others
Published: Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität München 2013
Subjects:
Online Access:http://edoc.ub.uni-muenchen.de/16414/1/Kilroy_Gerard.pdf
http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:19-164143
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spelling ndltd-MUENCHEN-oai-edoc.ub.uni-muenchen.de-164142014-01-14T03:45:36Z Numerical studies of tropical convection Kilroy, Gerard Fakultät für Physik Idealized numerical model experiments are presented to investigate the convective generation of vertical vorticity in a tropical depression. The calculations are motivated by observations made during the recent PREDICT field experiment to study tropical cyclogenesis, and by a desire to understand the aggregation of vorticity debris produced by deep convection in models of tropical cyclogenesis to form a monopole vortex. One aim is to isolate and quantify the effects of low to mid level dry air on convective cells that form within a depression and, in particular, on the generation of vertical vorticity in these cells. Another aim is to isolate the effects of a unidirectional boundary layer wind profile on storm structure, especially on vertical vorticity production and updraught splitting, and the combined effects of horizontal and vertical shear on vertical vorticity production, with and without background rotation. A third aim is to isolate the effects of a vortex boundary-layer wind profile on tropical deep convection, focussing especially on the morphology of vertical vorticity that develops. The growing convective updraughts, that are initiated by a near surface thermal perturbation, amplify locally the ambient rotation at low levels by more than an order of magnitude and this vorticity persists long after the updraught has decayed, supporting the results of an earlier study. The results of calculations with dry air aloft do not support a common perception that the dry air produces stronger downdraughts. In calculations where the vertical wind shear changes sign at some level near the top of the boundary layer, as occurs in warm-cored disturbances such as tropical depressions or tropical cyclones, it was found that the tilting of horizontal vorticity by a convective updraught leads not only to dipole patterns of vertical vorticity, but also to a reversal in sign of the updraught rotation with height. This feature is quite unlike the structure in a typical middle-latitude `supercell' storm. These results provide an essential first step to understanding the interaction between deep convective elements in a tropical depression or tropical cyclone. An increase in the magnitude of boundary-layer shear was found to have the dual effect of weakening the development of the initial thermal, which is detrimental to vertical vorticity production by stretching and tilting, while at the same time increasing the magnitude of horizontal vorticity that can be tilted. The results provide a basis for appraising a recent conjecture concerning the role of storm splitting in explaining the contraction of the eyewall in tropical cyclones. Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität München 2013-12-06 Dissertation NonPeerReviewed application/pdf http://edoc.ub.uni-muenchen.de/16414/1/Kilroy_Gerard.pdf http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:19-164143 Kilroy, Gerard (2013): Numerical studies of tropical convection. Dissertation, LMU München: Fakultät für Physik http://edoc.ub.uni-muenchen.de/16414/
collection NDLTD
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Fakultät für Physik
spellingShingle Fakultät für Physik
Kilroy, Gerard
Numerical studies of tropical convection
description Idealized numerical model experiments are presented to investigate the convective generation of vertical vorticity in a tropical depression. The calculations are motivated by observations made during the recent PREDICT field experiment to study tropical cyclogenesis, and by a desire to understand the aggregation of vorticity debris produced by deep convection in models of tropical cyclogenesis to form a monopole vortex. One aim is to isolate and quantify the effects of low to mid level dry air on convective cells that form within a depression and, in particular, on the generation of vertical vorticity in these cells. Another aim is to isolate the effects of a unidirectional boundary layer wind profile on storm structure, especially on vertical vorticity production and updraught splitting, and the combined effects of horizontal and vertical shear on vertical vorticity production, with and without background rotation. A third aim is to isolate the effects of a vortex boundary-layer wind profile on tropical deep convection, focussing especially on the morphology of vertical vorticity that develops. The growing convective updraughts, that are initiated by a near surface thermal perturbation, amplify locally the ambient rotation at low levels by more than an order of magnitude and this vorticity persists long after the updraught has decayed, supporting the results of an earlier study. The results of calculations with dry air aloft do not support a common perception that the dry air produces stronger downdraughts. In calculations where the vertical wind shear changes sign at some level near the top of the boundary layer, as occurs in warm-cored disturbances such as tropical depressions or tropical cyclones, it was found that the tilting of horizontal vorticity by a convective updraught leads not only to dipole patterns of vertical vorticity, but also to a reversal in sign of the updraught rotation with height. This feature is quite unlike the structure in a typical middle-latitude `supercell' storm. These results provide an essential first step to understanding the interaction between deep convective elements in a tropical depression or tropical cyclone. An increase in the magnitude of boundary-layer shear was found to have the dual effect of weakening the development of the initial thermal, which is detrimental to vertical vorticity production by stretching and tilting, while at the same time increasing the magnitude of horizontal vorticity that can be tilted. The results provide a basis for appraising a recent conjecture concerning the role of storm splitting in explaining the contraction of the eyewall in tropical cyclones.
author Kilroy, Gerard
author_facet Kilroy, Gerard
author_sort Kilroy, Gerard
title Numerical studies of tropical convection
title_short Numerical studies of tropical convection
title_full Numerical studies of tropical convection
title_fullStr Numerical studies of tropical convection
title_full_unstemmed Numerical studies of tropical convection
title_sort numerical studies of tropical convection
publisher Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität München
publishDate 2013
url http://edoc.ub.uni-muenchen.de/16414/1/Kilroy_Gerard.pdf
http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:19-164143
work_keys_str_mv AT kilroygerard numericalstudiesoftropicalconvection
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