Frictionally induced feedback in a reduced dynamical model of tropical cyclone intensification

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Abstract

This study examines the role of frictional feedback in the atmospheric boundary layer during tropical cyclone (TC) development. Using a reduced model of TC dynamics, it is shown that a feedback between frictional convergence and convective heating in the absence of slantwise moist neutrality is capable of producing a stable maximum-intensity limit, even without surface fluxes. However, the efficiency of this frictional-convergence feedback depends crucially on how effectively boundary layer moisture convergence is converted into convective heating, which decreases rapidly as the TC inner core approaches a state of moist neutrality. This decreasing efficiency during TC intensification explains why the effect of the frictional-convergence feedback is generally small compared to that of the wind-induced surface heat exchange (WISHE) feedback under the strict conditions of slantwise moist neutrality. Examination of the reduced TC model with a constantheating source reveals that TC intensification is not peculiar to any specific feedback mechanism but, rather, is a direct consequence of the inward advection of absolute angular momentum, regardless of feedback mechanism.

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Kieu, C., Rotunno, R., & Wang, Q. (2020). Frictionally induced feedback in a reduced dynamical model of tropical cyclone intensification. Journal of the Atmospheric Sciences, 77(11), 3821–3831. https://doi.org/10.1175/JAS-D-20-0092.1

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