Stationary and Transient Asymmetric Features in Tropical Cyclone Eye with Wavenumber-1 Instability: Case Study for Typhoon Haishen (2020) with Atmospheric Motion Vectors from 30-Second Imaging

Author:

Horinouchi Takeshi12ORCID,Tsujino Satoki3,Hayashi Masahiro3,Shimada Udai23,Yanase Wataru3,Wada Akiyoshi3,Yamada Hiroyuki24

Affiliation:

1. a Faculty of Environmental Earth Science, Hokkaido University, Sapporo, Hokkaido, Japan

2. b Typhoon Science and Technology Research Center, Yokohama National University, Yokohama, Japan

3. c Meteorological Research Institute, Tsukuba, Ibaraki, Japan

4. d University of Ryukuus, Naha, Okinawa, Japan

Abstract

Abstract Dynamics of low-level flows in the eye of Typhoon Haishen (2020) in its late phase of intensification are investigated with a special rapid-scan observation of the Himawari-8 geosynchronous satellite conducted every 30 s. This is accomplished by deriving storm-relative atmospheric motion vectors at an unprecedentedly high spatiotemporal resolution by tracking clouds across five consecutive visible-light reflectivity. The overall low-level circulation center was situated several kilometers away from the storm center defined in terms of the inner edge of the lower part of eyewall clouds. The shift direction is rearward of the storm translation, consistently with a numerical study of the tropical cyclone (TC) boundary layer. Over the analysis period of 10 h, azimuthal-mean tangential wind around this center was increased at each radius within the eye, and the rotational angular velocity was nearly homogenized. The instantaneous low-level circulation center is found to orbit around the overall circulation center at distances around 5 km. Its orbital angular speed was close to the maximum angular speed of azimuthal-mean tangential winds. This rotating transient disturbance is found to transport angular momentum inward, which explains the tangential wind increase and the angular velocity homogenization in the eye. These features are consistent with an algebraically growing wavenumber-1 barotropic instability, whose impact on TC structures has not been explored. This instability enhances wavenumber-1 asymmetry in ring-shaped vorticity, which can be induced by various processes such as translation, environmental shear, and exponential barotropic instability. Therefore, it may appear broadly in TCs to affect wind distribution in their eyes. Significance Statement Axially asymmetric transient features in the inner cores of tropical storms have been suggested to profoundly affect the structures and the time evolutions of tropical storms. However, the scarcity of observations has hindered studying such processes observationally. By using a specially conducted high-frequency satellite imaging of Typhoon Haishen (2020), we derived atmospheric motion vectors nearly homogeneously at an unprecedentedly high spatiotemporal resolution. Various kinds of asymmetric motions in low-level flows in the eye were found. Of particular interest is a special type of wavenumber-1 instability whose role has not drawn much attention; the instability was found to provide angular momentum transport consistent with the measured homogenization of the rotation.

Funder

Japan Society for the Promotion of Science

Publisher

American Meteorological Society

Subject

Atmospheric Science

Reference45 articles.

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