Typhoon air-sea drag coefficient in coastal regions

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Abstract

The air-sea drag during typhoon landfalls is investigated for a 10 m wind speed as high as U10 ≈ 42 m s-1, based on multilevel wind measurements from a coastal tower located in the South China Sea. The drag coefficient (CD) plotted against the typhoon wind speed is similar to that of open ocean conditions; however, the CD curve shifts toward a regime of lower winds, and CD increases by a factor of approximately 0.5 relative to the open ocean. Our results indicate that the critical wind speed at which CD peaks is approximately 24 m s-1, which is 5-15 m s-1 lower than that from deep water. Shoaling effects are invoked to explain the findings. Based on our results, the proposed CD formulation, which depends on both water depth and wind speed, is applied to a typhoon forecast model. The forecasts of typhoon track and surface wind speed are improved. Therefore, a water-depth-dependence formulation of CD may be particularly pertinent for parameterizing air-sea momentum exchanges over shallow water.

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Zhao, Z. K., Liu, C. X., Li, Q., Dai, G. F., Song, Q. T., & Lv, W. H. (2015). Typhoon air-sea drag coefficient in coastal regions. Journal of Geophysical Research: Oceans, 120(2), 716–727. https://doi.org/10.1002/2014JC010283

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