Title: Tropical Cyclones
1Tropical CyclonesTornadoes
2Formation of Tropical Cyclones
- Warm ocean waters (gt 26.5C) throughout a
sufficient depth (gt 50 m) - An atmosphere is potentially unstable to moist
convection - Relatively moist layers near the mid-troposphere
(5 km) - A minimum distance of at least 500 km from the
equator for non-negligible amounts of the
Coriolis force - A pre-existing near-surface disturbance with
sufficient vorticity and convergence - Low values (lt 10 m/s) of vertical wind shear
between the surface and the upper troposphere
3Air Flowing into a Low Pressure Area (North
Hemisphere)
4Locations of Tropical Cyclone Formation for a
20-year Period
5Nature of Tropical Cyclones
- Huge whirlpools in atmosphere
- A disc-like shape with a vertical scale of tens
of kilometres against horizontal dimensions of
hundreds of kilometres - The rainbands rotate in the same sense as the
storm circulation (anti-clockwise in the Northern
Hemisphere but clockwise in the Southern
Hemisphere - Coriolis force) - A travelling heat engine (feeds on latent heat
released from condensation in moist air) - The "eye" is typically of the order of tens of
kilometres in diameter and relatively calm - Lifespan varying from a few days to a few weeks
6A Tropical Cyclone in the Northern Hemisphere
7A Tropical Cyclone in the Southern Hemisphere
8Structure of Tropical Cyclones
- Warm core system
- Low level pressure is lowest at the centre
(convergence) - High level pressure is highest at the centre
(divergence) - The region of phenomenal winds is confined to a
ring around the eye wall (conservation of angular
momentum) - Air is ascending around the eye wall and
descending at the centre
9Model Vertical Profile of a Mature Typhoon
10Wind Speed Record during the Passage of Hurricane
Celia (1970) at Gregory, Texas, USA.
11Three Dimensional Air Trajectories through a
Typhoon as Simulated by the Computer.
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14Tracking and Locating
- Satellite analysis (especially over the vast
expanse of the oceans) - A well-formed eye is a definite indicator of
where the storm is - Tracing the spiral rainbands of the storm or
studying the relative motion of cloud features
near its centre - Tracking on the radar (if the storm is located
within 500 km of Hong Kong)
15Typhoon York (???? - 1999) as Seen from the Radar
16Infra-red (left) and Visible (right) Satellite
Pictures of Tropical Storm Hope (1989) Taken at
the Same Time
17Examples of Factors that Need to be Considered in
Track Forecasting
- Inertial tendency (drift towards the northwest in
the Northern Hemisphere) - The environmental current
- Westward extent of the Pacific ridge
- North-south migration of the ridge axis
- Point of weakness in the ridge
- Interaction with mid-latitude weather systems
- Interaction with other tropical cyclone(s)
- Interaction with terrain
- Weak flow region where the steering current is
ill-defined
18Typical Tracks of Tropical Cyclones over the
Western North Pacific
19The Fujiwhara Effect (????)
- A paper describing the motions of "vortices" in
water by Dr. Sakuhei Fujiwhara in 1921 - Interactions between vortices
- If two vortices are equal in size and strength
and spin in the same direction gt rotate around
one another - If two vortices spinning counter-clockwise
approach and one of the vortices is larger than
the other gt the smaller of the two vortices will
get caught in the circulation of the larger one
and be gobbled up eventually
20Methods Used for Forecasting the Track of
Tropical Cyclones
- Conventional weather chart analysis
- Climatology and statistics
- Statistical-dynamical methods
- Numerical models
- Remark The science of tropical cyclone
forecasting is by no means perfect. The multitude
of contributing factors are so complex that they
are as yet not entirely understood, or are only
crudely represented (sometimes for practical
reasons) in the various forecast schemes.
21A Numerical Weather Forecast Map (NGP)
22Typhoon Season of Hong Kong in 1999
23Power of Tropical Cyclones
- Generating mechanical power of about 1.5 x 1012 W
( half the world-wide electrical generating
capacity) - Sustained winds on record 165 kt (306 km/hr)
- Minimum surface pressure on record 870 mb
- Height of surge on record 13 m
- Rainfall on record 1,825 mm in 24 hrs.
- Size on record 1,100 km in radius
- Life-span on record 31 days
- Casualties on record 300,000 people dead
24Typhoons Necessitating the Hoisting of the
Hurricane Signal No.10
25Typhoon Wanda (???? - 1962)
- Duration August 27 to September 2, 1962
- Maximum sustained winds (HKO) 72 knots 133km/h
(Record) - Maximum gust 140 knots 259 km/h (HKO) 153
knots 284 km/h (Tate's Cairn) (Record) - Closest distance from HKO 20 km SSW
- Instantaneous minimum surface pressure (HKO)
953.2 mb (Record) - Daily amounts of rainfall (HKO) 203.0 mm
(September 1) - Maximum tide height (Tai Po) 5.4 m
- Casualties 130 persons dead (Record)
26Record of Wind Speed of Typhoon Wanda
27Record of Surface Pressure of Typhoon Wanda
28Damage due to Typhoon Wanda
29Typhoon Wayne (???? - 1986)
- Duration August 18 to September 6, 1986
- Tropical cyclone signals were hoisted and lowered
on three separate occasions for the same storm - Classic example of delicate interplay and balance
among various meteorological factors - The Fujiwhara effect
30Typhoon Wayne as Seen from the Radar
31Interaction between Wayne and Another Typhoon
named Vera - the Fujiwhara Effect
32Formation of Tornadoes
- Spawned in thunderstorms
- Vertical shear of horizontal wind (?????)
- Horizontal vorticity formed (aligned with the
average wind direction - streamwise vorticity) - Convection (updrafts) in thunderstorms distort
the vortex tube from horizontal to vertical - Regions of rotating updraft air in the
thunderstorms formed (mesocyclones) - The rotations in mesocyclones concentrated to
form tornadoes (similar to the water vortices -
vertical stretching)
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34Nature of Tornadoes
- Vortices in atmosphere
- Funnel shapes with diameters on the scale of 100s
of meters (Coriolis force is negligible in such
small system) - Rotate anti-clockwise in many cases (the North
Hemisphere) - Low pressure centres (capricious effect may be
caused) - Lifespan measured in minutes
35Tornado Variations and Waterspouts(???)
- Some tornadoes may form during the early stages
of rapidly developing thunderstorms - Tornadoes may appear nearly transparent until
dust and debris are picked up - Occasionally, two or more tornadoes may occur at
the same time - Tornadoes (weak) that form over warm water are
called waterspouts - Waterspouts occasionally move inland becoming
tornadoes causing damage and injuries
36Tornadoes Spawned by Tropical Cyclones (TC
Tornadoes)
- Spawn when certain instability and vertical shear
criteria are met - The smaller and shallower storm cells gt weaker
tornadoes (no F5-rated TC tornadoes in the past
50 years of reliable data) - Almost all tropical cyclones making landfall in
the United States spawn at least one tornado - The right-front quadrant of a tropical cyclone
(relative to TC motion) is strongly favored for
tornado formation (the Northern Hemisphere) - Tornadoes may be spawned up to three days after
landfall of tropical cyclones - Hurricane Beulah spawned a reported 141 tornadoes
in southeast Texas during the first several days
after its landfall in September 1967 - TC tornadoes are especially difficult to deal
with because the unusually small storm cells that
may be overlooked
37A Waterspout Occurred during Typhoon Durian (????
- 2001)
38Power of Tornadoes
- In an average year, 800 tornadoes are reported,
resulting in 80 deaths and over 1,500 injuries in
USA - Wind speeds can approach 800 km/hr.
- Damage paths can be in excess of one mile wide
and 50 miles long - Lifetime of violent tornadoes can exceed 1 hour
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