MEANINGLESS_NUMBERS wrote:I know these waters are warm and deep at this time of year but I wonder if we’ll start to see upwelling before landfall.
It isn’t just upwelling that cools the waters at or near where a hurricane crosses: it also cools due to the conservation of energy (potential energy from warm water transitions to kinetic (wind) energy of the storm/heat engine), cooling from raindrops (I assume this factor is relatively minor), and cooling from cloudcover blocking the sun:
Hurricanes cool the ocean by acting like "heat engines" that transfer heat from the ocean surface to the atmosphere through evaporation.
Cooling is also caused by upwelling of cold water from below due to the suction effect of the low-pressure center of the storm.
Additional cooling may come from cold water from raindrops that remain on the ocean surface for a time.
Cloud cover may also play a role in cooling the ocean by shielding the ocean surface from direct sunlight before and slightly after the storm passage.
All these effects can combine to produce a dramatic drop in sea surface temperature over a large area in just a few days.
https://earthobservatory.nasa.gov/image ... he%20storm












