Directional Wind―Wave Coupling in Fully Coupled Atmosphere―Wave―Ocean Models: Results from CBLAST-Hurricane

The extreme high winds, intense rainfall, large ocean waves, and copious sea spray in hurricanes push the surface-exchange parameters for temperature, water vapor, and momentum into untested regimes. The Coupled Boundary Layer Air–Sea Transfer (CBLAST)-Hurricane program is aimed at developing improv...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of the atmospheric sciences 2013-10, Vol.70 (10), p.3198-3215
Hauptverfasser: CHEN, Shuyi S, WEI ZHAO, DONELAN, Mark A, TOLMAN, Hendrik L
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container_issue 10
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creator CHEN, Shuyi S
WEI ZHAO
DONELAN, Mark A
TOLMAN, Hendrik L
description The extreme high winds, intense rainfall, large ocean waves, and copious sea spray in hurricanes push the surface-exchange parameters for temperature, water vapor, and momentum into untested regimes. The Coupled Boundary Layer Air–Sea Transfer (CBLAST)-Hurricane program is aimed at developing improved coupling parameterizations (using the observations collected during the CBLAST-Hurricane field program) for the next-generation hurricane research prediction models. Hurricane-induced surface waves that determine the surface stress are highly asymmetric, which can affect storm structure and intensity significantly. Much of the stress is supported by waves in the wavelength range of 0.1–10 m, which is the unresolved “spectral tail” in present wave models. A directional wind–wave coupling method is developed to include effects of directionality of the wind and waves in hurricanes. The surface stress vector is calculated using the two-dimensional wave spectra from a wave model with an added short-wave spectral tail. The wind and waves are coupled in a vector form rather than through the traditional roughness scalar. This new wind–wave coupling parameterization has been implemented in a fully coupled atmosphere–wave–ocean model with 1.67-km grid resolution in the atmospheric model, which can resolve finescale features in the extreme high-wind region of the hurricane eyewall. It has been tested in a number of storms including Hurricane Frances (2004), which is one of the best-observed storms during the CBLAST-Hurricane 2004 field program. This paper describes the new wind–wave coupling parameterization and examines the characteristics of the coupled model simulations of Hurricane Frances (2004). Observations of surface waves and winds are used to evaluate the coupled model results.
doi_str_mv 10.1175/jas-d-12-0157.1
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source American Meteorological Society; EZB-FREE-00999 freely available EZB journals; Alma/SFX Local Collection
subjects Atmosphere
Atmospheric boundary layer
Atmospheric models
Boundary layers
Coupling
Earth, ocean, space
Exact sciences and technology
External geophysics
Hurricane research
Hurricanes
Laboratories
Meteorology
Modelling
Momentum
Ocean circulation
Ocean models
Ocean waves
Oceans
Parameterization
Physics of the high neutral atmosphere
Prediction models
Rain
Rainfall
Rainfall measurement
Roughness
Sea spray
Spray
Storm structure
Storms
Surface water waves
Surface waves
Vortices
Water vapor
Water vapour
Wave models
Wave spectra
Wavelength
Wind
Wind shear
Wind stress
Winds
title Directional Wind―Wave Coupling in Fully Coupled Atmosphere―Wave―Ocean Models: Results from CBLAST-Hurricane
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