Abstract
Results of hurricane boundary layer experiments conducted in outer rainbands of Hurricanes Josephine (1984) and Earl (1986) are presented. Comparisons of precipitation and kinematic structures in these storms and in Hurricane Floyd (1981) indicate that principal rainbands have common characteristic mesoscale and convective-scale features in the boundary layer. The two-dimensional mesoscale structure suggests that these rainbands are made up of a linear aggregate of cellular reflectivity elements (on the inner, upshear side of the band) and stratiform rain (on the outer downshear side). The bands are oriented perpendicular to the shear above the boundary layer and cells move downband at about 85% of the density-weighted mean wind speed of the 0.2-6 km layer. -from Author
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CITATION STYLE
Powell, M. D. (1990). Boundary layer structure and dynamics in outer hurricane rainbands. Part I: mesoscale rainfall and kinematic structure. Monthly Weather Review, 118(4), 891–917. https://doi.org/10.1175/1520-0493(1990)118<0891:BLSADI>2.0.CO;2
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