On the Relationship between Intensity and Rainfall Distribution in Tropical Cyclones Making Landfall over China

Author:

Yu Zifeng1,Wang Yuqing2,Xu Haiming3,Davidson Noel4,Chen Yandie5,Chen Yimin6,Yu Hui1

Affiliation:

1. a Shanghai Typhoon Institute and Laboratory of Typhoon Forecast Technique, China Meteorological Administration, Shanghai, China

2. b Department of Atmospheric Sciences and International Pacific Research Center, University of Hawai‘i at Mānoa, Honolulu, Hawaii

3. c College of Atmospheric Sciences and Pacific Typhoon Research Center, Nanjing University of Information Science and Technology, Nanjing, China

4. d Research and Development Branch, Bureau of Meteorology, Melbourne, Victoria, Australia

5. e Fujian Meteorological Bureau, Fuzhou, China

6. f Department of Environmental Science of Food and Biological Engineering, Zhangzhou Institute of Technology, Zhangzhou, China

Abstract

AbstractTRMM satellite 3B42 rainfall estimates for 133 landfalling tropical cyclones (TCs) over China during 2001–15 are used to examine the relationship between TC intensity and rainfall distribution. The rain rate of each TC is decomposed into axisymmetric and asymmetric components. The results reveal that, on average, axisymmetric rainfall is closely related to TC intensity. Stronger TCs have higher averaged peak axisymmetric rain rates, more averaged total rain, larger averaged rain areas, higher averaged rain rates, higher averaged amplitudes of the axisymmetric rainfall, and lower amplitudes of wavenumbers 1–4 relative to the total rainfall. Among different TC intensity change categories, rapidly decaying TCs show the most rapid decrease in both the total rainfall and the axisymmetric rainfall relative to the total rain. However, the maximum total rain, maximum rain area, and maximum rain rate are not absolutely dependent on TC intensity, suggesting that stronger TCs do not have systematically higher maximum rain rates than weaker storms. Results also show that the translational speed of TCs has little effect on the asymmetric rainfall distribution in landfalling TCs. The maximum rainfall of both the weaker and stronger TCs is generally located downshear to downshear left. However, when environmental vertical wind shear (VWS) is less than 5 m s−1, the asymmetric rainfall maxima are more frequently located upshear and onshore, suggesting that in weak VWS environments the coastline could have a significant effect on the rainfall asymmetry in landfalling TCs.

Funder

the State 973 Program of China

the Public welfare industry (meteorology) research Program

National Natural Science Foundation of China

NSF grant

JAMSTEC grant

Publisher

American Meteorological Society

Subject

Atmospheric Science

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