An Open-Source, Physics-Based, Tropical Cyclone Downscaling Model with Intensity-Dependent Steering
An open-source, physics-based tropical cyclone downscaling model is developed, in order to generate a large climatology of tropical cyclones. The model is composed of three primary components: (1) a random seeding process that determines genesis, (2) an intensity-dependent beta-advection model that...
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Zusammenfassung: | An open-source, physics-based tropical cyclone downscaling model is
developed, in order to generate a large climatology of tropical cyclones. The
model is composed of three primary components: (1) a random seeding process
that determines genesis, (2) an intensity-dependent beta-advection model that
determines the track, and (3) a non-linear differential equation set that
determines the intensification rate. The model is entirely forced by the
large-scale environment. Downscaling ERA5 reanalysis data shows that the model
is generally able to reproduce observed tropical cyclone climatology, such as
the global seasonal cycle, genesis locations, track density, and lifetime
maximum intensity distributions. Inter-annual variability in tropical cyclone
count and power-dissipation is also well captured, on both basin-wide and
global scales. Regional tropical cyclone hazard estimated by this model is also
analyzed using return period maps and curves. In particular, the model is able
to reasonably capture the observed return period curves of landfall intensity
in various sub-basins around the globe. The incorporation of an
intensity-dependent steering flow is shown to lead to regionally dependent
changes in power dissipation and return periods. Advantages and disadvantages
of this model, compared to other downscaling models, are also discussed. |
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DOI: | 10.48550/arxiv.2302.09455 |