Surface processes in the 7 November 2014 medicane from air–sea coupled high-resolution numerical modelling
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Published:2020-06-11
Issue:11
Volume:20
Page:6861-6881
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ISSN:1680-7324
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Container-title:Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics
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language:en
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Short-container-title:Atmos. Chem. Phys.
Author:
Bouin Marie-NoëlleORCID, Lebeaupin Brossier CindyORCID
Abstract
Abstract. A medicane, or Mediterranean cyclone with characteristics similar to
tropical cyclones, is simulated using a kilometre-scale
ocean–atmosphere coupled modelling platform. A first phase leads to
strong convective precipitation, with high potential vorticity
anomalies aloft due to an upper-level trough. Then, the deepening and
tropical transition of the cyclone result from a synergy of baroclinic
and diabatic processes. Heavy precipitation results from uplift of
conditionally unstable air masses due to low-level convergence at
sea. This convergence is enhanced by cold pools, generated either by
rain evaporation or by advection of continental air masses from northern
Africa. Back trajectories show that air–sea heat exchanges moisten the
low-level inflow towards the cyclone centre. However, the impact of
ocean–atmosphere coupling on the cyclone track, intensity and
life cycle is very weak. This is due to a sea-surface cooling 1 order
of magnitude weaker than for tropical cyclones, even in the area of
strong enthalpy fluxes. Surface currents have no impact. Analysing the
surface enthalpy fluxes shows that evaporation is controlled mainly by
the sea-surface temperature and wind. Humidity and temperature at the
first level play a role during the development phase only. In
contrast, the sensible heat transfer depends mainly on the temperature
at the first level throughout the medicane lifetime. This study shows that
the tropical transition, in this case, is dependent on processes
widespread in the Mediterranean Basin, like advection of continental
air, rain evaporation and formation of cold pools, and dry-air
intrusion.
Publisher
Copernicus GmbH
Subject
Atmospheric Science
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