mike18xx wrote:Derek Ortt wrote:of course you dont see the cirrus, ITS DESCENDING
I am looking
right at this:
http://cimss.ssec.wisc.edu/tropic/archive/2003/storms/isabel/movies/isabel-eye.html, and what you're saying ought to be there isn't there. (If you set speed very high and set to rock, you can see clear-air exhaust waves radiating outward across the CDO cirrus canopy.)
There is
nada going
into that eye -- because it's a centrifuge-induced partial-vacuum, not a downdraft-cleared pocket.
Dude...read the AOML site...the guys who actually research WHY storms do things.
Matter of fact...here are some more links that prove what Derek (And I) are saying. I tell you what...we'll provide the research links that prove OUR point of view...and you provide the links that support YOUR point of view...that there is no downdraft in the eye (because if there IS a downdraft...adiabatic warming MUST take place according to the laws of physics and that creates a clearing). I'll be waiting for your resources.
"The intense convection in the eyewall region induces sinking motion and adiabatic warming inside the eye (Willoughby 1990, 1998). "
http://www.rsmas.miami.edu/divs/mpo/Abo ... stract.pdf
"As tropical storms develop into hurricanes, they're characterized by upper tropospheric warming (the troposphere being
defined as that portion of the earth's atmosphere extending from the earth's surface to approximately 15km altitude)
as a result of adiabatic warming/compression of air as it subsides (sinks) within the storm center."
http://amsu.ssec.wisc.edu/explanation.html
"It is found that a large portion of surface perturbation pressures is caused by the moist-adiabatic warming in the eyewall and the subsidence warming in the eye."
http://ams.confex.com/ams/last2000/24Hu ... /12194.htm
"The winds are strongest around the eye wall, and the theory goes that these extremely strong winds act to throw air out of the eye, causing air from the upper levels to "fill in" <b> by subsiding, leading to the clear eye. As this air subsides, it warms by compression, thus taking the air farther from saturation, further reducing the likelihood for clouds in the eye, and contributing to the fair weather of the eye. </b> "
http://www.hprcc.unl.edu/nebraska/develop.html
Need any other proof besides quotes from the top hurricane researchers in the biz? If you do...just ask and I can give you a few hundred more.