
1st visible (well, half) lol
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Wthrman13 wrote:Comanche wrote:Anyone care to tackle this?
Regardless of heat content, this is at May levels, way below climo and from what I gather, is an impeding factor for this.
http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1 ... 4/abstract
Excerpt- "it would appear difficult for cyclones or anticyclones of any reasonable size to develop significantly in low latitudes, with the exception of cyclones in a vertically unstable atmosphere."
I know this was a ways back, and I didn't read through all the intervening pages, but I might be able to comment just a bit on this.
Please understand, I've only just skimmed the paper. However, I am familiar with the ideas presented. First note that the paper was published in 1950, back when our understanding of synoptic-scale weather systems was still limited. Sumner was arguing based on the energy available in the thermodynamic instability of the atmosphere alone, without really considering the additional energy source of the underlying surface (in the case of tropical cyclones, the warm ocean). Our understanding of synoptic-scale systems (both extra-tropical and tropical) has progressed in leaps and bounds since then. Specifically, in the case of tropical cyclones, it is now understood that tropical cyclones indeed derive most of their energy from the latent and sensible heat fluxes from the underlying ocean surface. Vertical thermodynamic atmospheric instability does play a role, but it is this air-sea interaction that really fuels the storm. Consider the following, somewhat-layman-readable article by Kerry Emanuel:
ftp://texmex.mit.edu/pub/emanuel/PAPERS ... y_2006.pdf
The basic idea is that a hurricane acts is a heat engine which makes use of the thermodynamic disequilibrium between the atmosphere and ocean to drive its "motor", which is the kinetic energy of the winds. The increased low-level winds increase the flux of heat and moisture from the ocean surface by agitating the surface (waves and spray), which increases the kinetic energy of the winds again, and so on in a positive feedback cycle. Eventually, in an ideal setting, a steady state is reached in which the dissipation of kinetic energy by turbulence and surface friction balances the amount of power generated by the thermodynamic energy flux, which leads to Emanuel's famous Maximum Potential Intensity (MPI) index (http://wxmaps.org/pix/hurpot.html).
Obviously, the real-world scenario is more complicated, but the above mechanism captures the essence. In the real world, you have vertical wind shear which disrupts the heat engine cycle by weakening the "ascent leg" of the Carnot cycle, and by allowing dry mid-tropospheric air into the inner core, which dilutes the warm core by evaporation and mixing. Also, the vertical thermodynamic instability, discussed in the Sumner paper linked above, can help by "priming the pump", but it is not actually necessary to sustain a tropical cyclone once it gets going: in effect, the flux of heat and moisture from the ocean surface creates the needed vertical instability on a large scale -- in this case, simply parcel theory-derived calculations of instability (i.e. CAPE) don't really apply.
That's my quick take on the question. Let me know if anything is unclear or if there are any questions. I must also point out again that I'm really not as much a TC expert as I am a midlatitude severe storm guy, and my knowledge of the most recent research developments in tropical cyclones is somewhat limited (btangy, where are you).
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