A View of Tropical Cyclones from Above: The Tropical Cyclone Intensity Experiment

Author:

Doyle James D.1,Moskaitis Jonathan R.1,Feldmeier Joel W.2,Ferek Ronald J.2,Beaubien Mark3,Bell Michael M.4,Cecil Daniel L.5,Creasey Robert L.6,Duran Patrick7,Elsberry Russell L.8,Komaromi William A.1,Molinari John7,Ryglicki David R.1,Stern Daniel P.9,Velden Christopher S.10,Wang Xuguang11,Allen Todd3,Barrett Bradford S.12,Black Peter G.13,Dunion Jason P.14,Emanuel Kerry A.15,Harr Patrick A.6,Harrison Lee7,Hendricks Eric A.6,Herndon Derrick10,Jeffries William Q.3,Majumdar Sharanya J.16,Moore James A.17,Pu Zhaoxia18,Rogers Robert F.19,Sanabia Elizabeth R.12,Tripoli Gregory J.20,Zhang Da-Lin21

Affiliation:

1. Naval Research Laboratory, Monterey, California

2. Office of Naval Research, Arlington, Virginia

3. Yankee Environmental Systems, Inc., Turners Falls, Massachusetts

4. Colorado State University, Fort Collins, Colorado

5. NASA Marshall Space Flight Center, Huntsville, Alabama

6. Naval Postgraduate School, Monterey, California

7. University at Albany, State University of New York, Albany, New York

8. University of Colorado Colorado Springs, Colorado Springs, Colorado

9. University Corporation for Atmospheric Research, Monterey, California

10. Cooperative Institute for Meteorological Satellite Studies, University of Wisconsin–Madison, Madison, Wisconsin

11. University of Oklahoma, Norman, Oklahoma

12. U.S. Naval Academy, Annapolis, Maryland

13. SAIC, Monterey, California

14. NOAA/Atlantic Oceanographic and Meteorological Laboratory/ Hurricane Research Division, Cooperative Institute for Marine and Atmospheric Studies, Rosenstiel School of Marine and Atmospheric Science, University of Miami, Miami, Florida

15. Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, Massachusetts

16. University of Miami, Miami, Florida

17. NCAR, Boulder, Colorado

18. University of Utah, Salt Lake City, Utah

19. NOAA/Atlantic Oceanographic and Meteorological Laboratory/Hurricane Research Division, Miami, Florida

20. University of Wisconsin–Madison, Madison, Wisconsin

21. University of Maryland, College Park, College Park, Maryland

Abstract

Abstract Tropical cyclone (TC) outflow and its relationship to TC intensity change and structure were investigated in the Office of Naval Research Tropical Cyclone Intensity (TCI) field program during 2015 using dropsondes deployed from the innovative new High-Definition Sounding System (HDSS) and remotely sensed observations from the Hurricane Imaging Radiometer (HIRAD), both on board the NASA WB-57 that flew in the lower stratosphere. Three noteworthy hurricanes were intensively observed with unprecedented horizontal resolution: Joaquin in the Atlantic and Marty and Patricia in the eastern North Pacific. Nearly 800 dropsondes were deployed from the WB-57 flight level of ∼60,000 ft (∼18 km), recording atmospheric conditions from the lower stratosphere to the surface, while HIRAD measured the surface winds in a 50-km-wide swath with a horizontal resolution of 2 km. Dropsonde transects with 4–10-km spacing through the inner cores of Hurricanes Patricia, Joaquin, and Marty depict the large horizontal and vertical gradients in winds and thermodynamic properties. An innovative technique utilizing GPS positions of the HDSS reveals the vortex tilt in detail not possible before. In four TCI flights over Joaquin, systematic measurements of a major hurricane’s outflow layer were made at high spatial resolution for the first time. Dropsondes deployed at 4-km intervals as the WB-57 flew over the center of Hurricane Patricia reveal in unprecedented detail the inner-core structure and upper-tropospheric outflow associated with this historic hurricane. Analyses and numerical modeling studies are in progress to understand and predict the complex factors that influenced Joaquin’s and Patricia’s unusual intensity changes.

Publisher

American Meteorological Society

Subject

Atmospheric Science

Reference50 articles.

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2. 2016: ONR Tropical Cyclone Intensity 2015 NASA WB-57 HDSS dropsonde data, version 1.0. UCAR/NCAR Earth Observing Laboratory, accessed 1;Bell

3. Berg, R. , 2016a: Tropical cyclone report, Hurricane Marty. National Hurricane Center, National Weather Service, 17 pp. [Available online at www.nhc.noaa.gov/data/tcr/EP172015_Marty.pdf.]

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