Abstract
Essential parameters for making a looping track when a westward-moving tropical cyclone (TC) approaches a mesoscale mountain are investigated by examining several key nondimensional control parameters with a series of systematic, idealized numerical experiments, such as U/Nh, Vmax/Nh, U/fLx, Vmax/fR, h/Lx, and R/Ly. Here U is the uniform zonal wind velocity, N the Brunt–Vaisala frequency, h the mountain height, f the Coriolis parameter, Vmax the maximum tangential velocity at a radius of R from the cyclone center and Lx is the halfwidth of the mountain in the east–west direction. It is found that looping tracks (a) tend to occur under small U/Nh and U/fLx, moderate h/Lx, and large Vmax/Nh, which correspond to slow movement (leading to subgeostrophic flow associated with strong orographic blocking), moderate steepness, and strong tangential wind associated with TC vortex; (b) are often accompanied by an area of perturbation high pressure to the northeast of the mountain, which lasts for only a short period; and (c) do not require the existence of a northerly jet. The nondimensional control parameters are consolidated into a TC looping index (LI), U2R2Vmax2hLy, which is tested by several historical looping and non-looping typhoons approaching Taiwan’s Central Mountain Range (CMR) from east or southeast. It is found that LI < 0.0125 may serve as a criterion for looping track to occur.
| Original language | English |
|---|---|
| Pages (from-to) | 333-348 |
| Number of pages | 16 |
| Journal | Meteorology and Atmospheric Physics |
| Volume | 130 |
| Issue number | 3 |
| DOIs | |
| State | Published - Jun 1 2018 |
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