Rainband‐Occurrence Probability in Northern Hemisphere Tropical Cyclones by Synthetic Aperture Radar Imagery

Author:

Zheng Gang1234ORCID,Jiang Han1,Wu Liang5ORCID,Li Xiaofeng6ORCID,Zhou Lizhang1ORCID,Wu Qiaoyan1ORCID,Chen Peng1,Ren Lin1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. State Key Laboratory of Satellite Ocean Environment Dynamics Second Institute of Oceanography Ministry of Natural Resources Hangzhou China

2. Ocean College Zhejiang University Zhoushan China

3. College of Oceanography Hohai University Nanjing China

4. Southern Marine Science and Engineering Guangdong Laboratory (Zhuhai) Zhuhai China

5. Center for Monsoon System Research Institute of Atmospheric Physics Chinese Academy of Sciences Beijing China

6. Key Laboratory of Ocean Circulation and Waves Institute of Oceanology Chinese Academy of Sciences Qingdao China

Abstract

AbstractRainbands are essential to tropical cyclones (TCs), significantly affecting TC structure and intensity change. High‐resolution synthetic aperture radar (SAR) imagery can capture the footprints of rainbands caused by rain‐induced sea surface roughness modification. Using 464 SAR TC images, we investigated the rainband‐occurrence probability of TCs under different hemispheres, local times (LTs), intensities, and ocean basins. Results show that the rainband‐occurrence probability is highest in the downshear‐left quadrant for Northern Hemisphere TCs (downshear‐right quadrant for Southern Hemisphere TCs). For Northern Hemisphere TCs, the rainband‐occurrence probability is overall higher in the early morning (LT), and the peak region of rainband‐occurrence probability appears farther from the TC center in the evening (LT). Compared with weak TCs, the rainband‐occurrence probability becomes higher for strong TCs in the Northern Hemisphere. Furthermore, TCs have a higher rainband‐occurrence probability in the Northwest Pacific than in the North Atlantic and Northeast Pacific.

Publisher

American Geophysical Union (AGU)

Reference48 articles.

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