Rainbands and Secondary Eye Wall Formation as Observed in RAINEX Derek Ortt and Shuyi S. Chen University of Miami-RSMAS.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Structure & Structure Change IWTC VI, Topic 1 Chair: Jeff Kepert (Substituting for Hugh Willoughby) Rapporteurs Environmental Effects (E. Ritchie) Inner.
Advertisements

AMS Hurricane and Tropical Meteorology Conference Tucson May 9, 2010 Vertical distribution of radar reflectivity in eyewalls observed by TRMM Deanna A.
Hurricane Frances. MODIS view of Hurricane Frances (Note that eye is present but clouds at base of eye make it look cloudy throughout)
Advanced Research WRF High Resolution Simulations of Hurricanes Katrina, Rita and Wilma (2005) Kristen L. Corbosiero, Wei Wang, Yongsheng Chen, Jimy Dudhia.
Genesis of Hurricane Julia (2010) from an African Easterly Wave Stefan Cecelski 1 and Dr. Da-Lin Zhang Department of Atmospheric and Oceanic Science, University.
Sensitivity of High-Resolution Simulations of Hurricane Bob (1991) to Planetary Boundary Layer Parameterizations SCOTT A. BRAUN AND WEI-KUO TAO PRESENTATION.
Deanna Hence, Robert Houze and Stacy Brodzik University of Washington Introduction Methodology Eyewall—All Overpasses Rainbands—All Overpasses Changes.
August- September NSF NOAA NRL NCAR UW UM RAINEX Workshop, Miami, 5-7 June 2006.
Vorticity Structures Accompanying Eyewall Replacement in Hurricane Rita (2005) R.A. Houze, Jr., and B.F. Smull Department of Atmospheric Sciences University.
February 5th, TRMM Conference The 3-D Reflectivity Structure of Intense Atlantic Hurricanes as seen by the TRMM PR Deanna Hence, Robert Houze.
Deanna Hence, Stacy Brodzik and Robert Houze University of Washington Introduction Methodology TCSP Storms RAINEX Storms Combined TCSP + RAINEX Storms.
Initializing a Hurricane Vortex with an EnKF Yongsheng Chen Chris Snyder MMM / NCAR.
Impacts of Soil Moisture on Storm Initiation Christopher M. Taylor Richard Ellis.
August- September NSF NOAA NRL NCAR UW UM 27th Conference on Hurricanes and Tropical Meteorology, Monterey, CA, 27 April 2006.
Mesoscale Observations in Hurricanes Robert Houze University of Washington First US-China Symposium on Meteorology, Norman, Oklahoma, 26 February 2008.
RAINEX: Convective Structures in Tropical Cyclones Robert Houze D. Hence, A. Didlake, B. Smull, W.-C. Lee, M. Bell Hurricane Workshop NCAR Boulder 23 February.
Three-Dimensional Precipitation Structure of Tropical Cyclones AMS Hurricane and Tropical Meteorology Conference May 2nd, 2008 Deanna A. Hence and Robert.
August- September NSF NOAA NRL NCAR UW UM AGU, San Francisco, 12 December 2006.
Principal Rainband of Hurricane Katrina as observed in RAINEX Anthony C. Didlake, Jr. 28 th Conference on Hurricanes and Tropical Meteorology April 29,
Observational and Modeling Study of Hurricane Rainbands and Intensity Changes aka Rainband and Intensity Change Experiment “RAINEX” Shuyi S. Chen and Robert.
IntroIntro Objective 04/27/12 Describe the formation of hurricanes. What is the difference between a hurricane, a typhoon, and a cyclone?
ATMS 373C.C. Hennon, UNC Asheville Observing the Tropics.
Vortex Rossby Waves in Hurricanes Katrina and Rita (2005) Falko Judt and Shuyi S. Chen Rosenstiel School of Marine and Atmospheric Science, University.
NSF Hurricane Research National Science Foundation Pamela Stephens Geosciences Directorate.
On the Improvement to H*Wind Hurricane Wind Analyses Due to the Inclusion of Future Ocean Surface Wind Measurements from Aircraft and Satellite Timothy.
Chapter 11 Notes Hurricanes. Tropical Storms Boris and Christiana Together-2008 Profile of a Hurrican Most hurricanes form between the latitudes of 5.
3DVAR Retrieval of 3D Moisture Field from Slant- path Water Vapor Observations of a High-resolution Hypothetical GPS Network Haixia Liu and Ming Xue Center.
Chapter 11 Hurricanes. Hurricane Katrina Flooded 80% of New Orleans The US’s deadliest hurricane in terms of deaths happened in 1900 in Galveston, Tx.
Hurricane structure and intensity change : Effects of wind shear and Air-Sea Interaction M é licie Desflots Rosenstiel School of Marine & Atmospheric Science.
Air-Sea Exchange in Hurricanes by Peter G. Black & Hurricane Intensity and Eyewall Replacement by Robert A. Houze Jr. Lynsie M. Schwerer Atmospheric Science.
Hurricane Microphysics: Ice vs Water A presenation of papers by Willoughby et al. (1984) and Heymsfield et al. (2005) Derek Ortt April 17, 2007.
DATA ASSIMILATION FOR HURRICANE PREDICTION Experimental system and results of semi-operational implementation during the 2010 Atlantic Hurricane Season.
The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) is working to use Unmanned Aircraft Systems (UAS) to improve its ability to monitor the global.
How Do Outer Spiral Rainband Affect Tropical Cyclone Structure and Intensity? The working hypothesis is based on the fact that the outer rainbands are.
Shuyi S. Chen Joseph Tenerelli Rosenstiel School of Marine and Atmospheric Science University of Miami Effects of Environmental Flow and Initial Vortex.
Application of COSMIC refractivity in Improving Tropical Analyses and Forecasts H. Liu, J. Anderson, B. Kuo, C. Snyder, and Y. Chen NCAR IMAGe/COSMIC/MMM.
Assimilating Moisture Information from GPS Dropwindsondes into the NOAA Global Forecast System A NOAA/Joint Hurricane Testbed Project Jason P. Dunion 1.
Real-Time High-Resolution MM5 and WRF Forecasts during RAINEX John P. Cangialosi 1*, S. S. Chen 1, W. Zhao 1, D. Ortt 1 W. Wang 2 and J. Michalakas 2 1.
2015 HS3 Science Team Meeting Ames Research Center, Moffett Field, CA.
Doppler Lidar Winds & Tropical Cyclones Frank D. Marks AOML/Hurricane Research Division 7 February 2007.
SVW Requirements Workshop Miami, FL 5-7 June, 2006 Airborne Measurements of Ocean Backscatter Daniel Esteban Fernandez Acknowledgements: NOAA NESDIS Office.
Benjamin A. Schenkel University at Albany, State University of New York, and Robert E. Hart, The Florida State University 38 th.
Dynamics and predictability of the rapid intensification of Hurricane Edouard (2014) Erin Munsell Summer 2015 Group Meeting August 17 th, 2015.
Multi-Scale Analysis of the Kinematic and Thermodynamic Structure of TS Humberto Using Dropsonde and Satellite Data Jeffrey B. Halverson, UMBC Alex Martin,
Analysis of Typhoon Tropical Cyclogenesis in an Atmospheric General Circulation Model Suzana J. Camargo and Adam H. Sobel.
Shuyi S. Chen Rosenstial School of Marine and Atmospheric Science University of Miami (DRAFT only!!! Improving Hurricane Structure and Intensity Forecast:
The Tropical Transition of Cyclones: Science Issues and Critical Observations or TC Genesis: A Global Problem Chris Davis (NCAR) Collaborators: Lance Bosart.
1 Current and planned research with data collected during the IFEX/RAINEX missions Robert Rogers NOAA/AOML/Hurricane Research Division.
INNER CORE STRUCTURE AND INTENSITY CHANGE IN HURRICANE ISABEL (2003) Shuyi S. Chen and Peter J. Kozich RSMAS/University of Miami J. Gamache, P. Dodge,
JP1.18 Physical processes associated with surface wind field uncertainty in Hurricanes Katrina and Rita (2005): Use of present and future observational.
Shuyi S. Chen Rosenstial School of Marine and Atmospheric Science University of Miami Overview of RAINEX Modeling of 2005 Hurricanes In the eye of Katrina.
2. WRF model configuration and initial conditions  Three sets of initial and lateral boundary conditions for Katrina are used, including the output from.
Shuyi S. Chen, Robert A. Houze Bradley Smull, David Nolan, Wen-Chau Lee Frank Marks, and Robert Rogers Observational and Modeling Study of Hurricane Rainbands.
The Centre for Australian Weather and Climate Research A partnership between CSIRO and the Bureau of Meteorology The Tropical Cyclone Boundary Layer 2:
Evolution of Hurricane Isabel’s (2003) Vortex Structure and Intensity
Rosenstial School of Marine and Atmospheric Science
Derek Ortt1 and Shuyi S. Chen, RSMAS/University of Miami
Yumin Moon & David S. Nolan (2014)
Hurricanes.
NOAA Intensity Forecasting Experiment (IFEX)
Water Budget of Typhoon Nari(2001)
A LATENT HEAT RETRIEVAL IN A RAPIDLY INTENSIFYING HURRICANE
Chapter 11 Hurricanes.
Conceptual Models of Tropical Cyclone Structures
RAINEX briefing at the NOAA AOC in Tampa
Comparison of secondary eyewall and principal rainband in Hurricane Rita (2005) Not a modeling study Several theories out there for secondary eyewall formation.
Tong Zhu and Da-Lin Zhang 2006:J. Atmos. Sci.,63,
Tong Zhu and Da-Lin Zhang
A Multiscale Numerical Study of Hurricane Andrew (1992)
Dual-Aircraft Investigation of the Inner Core of Hurricane Nobert
Presentation transcript:

Rainbands and Secondary Eye Wall Formation as Observed in RAINEX Derek Ortt and Shuyi S. Chen University of Miami-RSMAS

Motivation and Objective To examine the properties of rainbands in Hurricanes Katrina and Rita using RAINEX observations and model simulations To determine the physical processes that may be responsible for the formation of concentric eyewalls and eyewall replacement cycles in Hurricane Rita

Hurricanes Katrina and Rita KatrinaRita

Data and Analysis Method TMI water vapor data with a ¼ degree resolution P-3 GPS dropsonde data with a ½ s resolution (interpolated on to a 25m vertical resolution) from NOAA and NRL aircraft (47 in Katrina and 40 in Rita) G-IV dropsondes interpolated on a 100m resolution (56 in Katrina and 56 in Rita) Dropsondes are composited day by day Model data is from MM5 vortex following simulations with 3 nested domains at 15, 5, and 1.67km resolution Similar analysis methods are used the with the model as with the TMI and aircraft data

Observations

TMI Total Precipitable Water Katrina Rita Black dots represent sample G-IV dropsonde locations

Storm outer environment

Storm outer environment

Sample P3 Dropsonde Locations Katrina Rita Black dots represent sample P3 dropsonde locations along the flight tracks

Sample Dropsonde Locations Red: NRL P-3 dropsondes Black: NOAA P-3 dropsondes G-IV dropsondes are released farther from the center than the drops depicted above. KatrinaRita

Rainband region

P-3 Dropsonde Composites KatrinaRita

Model Simulations

MM5 Total Precipitable Water KatrinaRita

Sample Model Vertical Profile Locations Magenta dots represent model simulated dropsonde locations Katrina Rita

MM5 Composite Vertical Profiles KatrinaRita

KatrinaRita

KatrinaRita

OTHER STORMS

2004 Frances

EWRC

2004 Ivan

NO EWRC

Conceptual Model of Moisture Gradient Affects to Rainbands Weak Gradient Strong Gradient Moist Dry

Conclusions The Rainbands in Rita were more symmetric about the storm than those in Katrina A sharp moisture gradient between the rainbands and surrounding environment was present in Rita, but not Katrina The rainbands in Rita were able to form into a secondary eye wall. A stable outer storm environment favor symmetric rainbands about the center, which may lead to the formation of concentric eyewalls

Aknowledgements Katrina and Rita track graphics courtesy of Unisys Weather TMI data from NRL and remote sensing systems NOAA P-3 and G-IV dropsonde data courtesy of AOML-HRD This work was funded by NSF grant ATM and this presenter has been funded by an AMS and University of Miami Fellowship