Impact of different ENSO regimes on southwest pacific tropical cyclones
- Chand, Savin, McBride, John, Tory, Kevin, Wheeler, Matthew, Walsh, Kevin
- Authors: Chand, Savin , McBride, John , Tory, Kevin , Wheeler, Matthew , Walsh, Kevin
- Date: 2013
- Type: Text , Journal article
- Relation: Journal of Climate Vol. 26, no. 2 (2013), p. 600-608
- Full Text: false
- Reviewed:
- Description: The influence of different types of ENSO on tropical cyclone (TC) interannual variability in the central southwest Pacific region (58-258S, 1708E-1708W) is investigated. Using empirical orthogonal function analysis and an agglomerative hierarchical clustering of early tropical cyclone season Pacific sea surface temperature, years are classified into four separate regimes (i.e., canonical El Niño, canonical La Niña, positive-neutral, and negative-neutral) for the period between 1970 and 2009.These regimes are found to have a large impact on TC genesis over the central southwest Pacific region. Both the canonical El Niño and the positive-neutral years have increased numbers of cyclones, with an average of 4.3 yr-1 for positive-neutral and 4 yr-1 for canonical El Niño. In contrast, during a La Niña and negative-neutral events, substantially fewer TCs (averages of ;2.2 and 2.4 yr-1, respectively) are observed in the central southwest Pacific. The enhancement of TC numbers in both canonical El Niño and positive-neutral years is associated with the extension of favorable low-level cyclonic relative vorticity, and low vertical wind shear eastward across the date line. Relative humidity and SST are also very conducive forgenesis in this region during canonical El Niño and positiveneutral events. The patterns are quite different, however, with the favorable conditions concentrated in the date line region for the positive-neutral, as compared with conditions farther eastward for the canonical El Niño regime. A significant result of the study is the demonstration that ENSO-neutralevents can be objectively clustered into two separate regimes, each with very different impacts on TCgenesis. © 2013 American Meteorological Society.
- Authors: Chand, Savin , McBride, John , Tory, Kevin , Wheeler, Matthew , Walsh, Kevin
- Date: 2013
- Type: Text , Journal article
- Relation: Journal of Climate Vol. 26, no. 2 (2013), p. 600-608
- Full Text: false
- Reviewed:
- Description: The influence of different types of ENSO on tropical cyclone (TC) interannual variability in the central southwest Pacific region (58-258S, 1708E-1708W) is investigated. Using empirical orthogonal function analysis and an agglomerative hierarchical clustering of early tropical cyclone season Pacific sea surface temperature, years are classified into four separate regimes (i.e., canonical El Niño, canonical La Niña, positive-neutral, and negative-neutral) for the period between 1970 and 2009.These regimes are found to have a large impact on TC genesis over the central southwest Pacific region. Both the canonical El Niño and the positive-neutral years have increased numbers of cyclones, with an average of 4.3 yr-1 for positive-neutral and 4 yr-1 for canonical El Niño. In contrast, during a La Niña and negative-neutral events, substantially fewer TCs (averages of ;2.2 and 2.4 yr-1, respectively) are observed in the central southwest Pacific. The enhancement of TC numbers in both canonical El Niño and positive-neutral years is associated with the extension of favorable low-level cyclonic relative vorticity, and low vertical wind shear eastward across the date line. Relative humidity and SST are also very conducive forgenesis in this region during canonical El Niño and positiveneutral events. The patterns are quite different, however, with the favorable conditions concentrated in the date line region for the positive-neutral, as compared with conditions farther eastward for the canonical El Niño regime. A significant result of the study is the demonstration that ENSO-neutralevents can be objectively clustered into two separate regimes, each with very different impacts on TCgenesis. © 2013 American Meteorological Society.
Western north pacific tropical cyclone tracks in cmip5 models : statistical assessment using a model-independent detection and tracking scheme
- Bell, Samuel, Chand, Savin, Camargo, Suzana, Tory, Kevin, Turville, Chris, Ye, Harvey
- Authors: Bell, Samuel , Chand, Savin , Camargo, Suzana , Tory, Kevin , Turville, Chris , Ye, Harvey
- Date: 2019
- Type: Text , Journal article
- Relation: Journal of Climate Vol. 32, no. 21 (2019), p. 7191-7208
- Full Text:
- Reviewed:
- Description: Past studies have shown that tropical cyclone (TC) projection results can be sensitive to different types of TC tracking schemes, and that the relative adjustments of detection criteria to accommodate different models may not necessarily provide a consistent platform for comparison of projection results. Here, future climate projections of TC activity in the western North Pacific basin (WNP, defined from 0°-50°NAND 100°E-180°) are assessed with a model-independent detection and tracking scheme. This scheme is applied to models from phase 5 of the Coupled Model Intercomparison Project (CMIP5) forced under the historical and representative concentration pathway 8.5 (RCP8.5) conditions. TC tracks from the observed records and independent models are analyzed simultaneously with a curve-clustering algorithm, allowing observed and model tracks to be projected onto the same set of clusters (k =9). Four of the nine clusters were projected to undergo significant changes in TC frequency. Straight-moving TCs in the South China Sea were projected to significantly decrease. Projected increases in TC frequency were found poleward of 20°N and east of 160°E, consistent with changes in ascending motion, as well as vertical wind shear and relative humidity respectively. Projections of TC track exposure indicated significant reductions for southern China and the Philippines and significant increases for the Korean peninsula and Japan, although very few model TCs reached the latter subtropical regions in comparison to the observations. The use of a fundamentally different detection methodology that overcomes the detector/tracker bias gives increased certainty to projections as best as lowresolution simulations can offer. © 2019 American Meteorological Society.
- Authors: Bell, Samuel , Chand, Savin , Camargo, Suzana , Tory, Kevin , Turville, Chris , Ye, Harvey
- Date: 2019
- Type: Text , Journal article
- Relation: Journal of Climate Vol. 32, no. 21 (2019), p. 7191-7208
- Full Text:
- Reviewed:
- Description: Past studies have shown that tropical cyclone (TC) projection results can be sensitive to different types of TC tracking schemes, and that the relative adjustments of detection criteria to accommodate different models may not necessarily provide a consistent platform for comparison of projection results. Here, future climate projections of TC activity in the western North Pacific basin (WNP, defined from 0°-50°NAND 100°E-180°) are assessed with a model-independent detection and tracking scheme. This scheme is applied to models from phase 5 of the Coupled Model Intercomparison Project (CMIP5) forced under the historical and representative concentration pathway 8.5 (RCP8.5) conditions. TC tracks from the observed records and independent models are analyzed simultaneously with a curve-clustering algorithm, allowing observed and model tracks to be projected onto the same set of clusters (k =9). Four of the nine clusters were projected to undergo significant changes in TC frequency. Straight-moving TCs in the South China Sea were projected to significantly decrease. Projected increases in TC frequency were found poleward of 20°N and east of 160°E, consistent with changes in ascending motion, as well as vertical wind shear and relative humidity respectively. Projections of TC track exposure indicated significant reductions for southern China and the Philippines and significant increases for the Korean peninsula and Japan, although very few model TCs reached the latter subtropical regions in comparison to the observations. The use of a fundamentally different detection methodology that overcomes the detector/tracker bias gives increased certainty to projections as best as lowresolution simulations can offer. © 2019 American Meteorological Society.
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