Characteristics of Tropical Cyclone Outer Size and Structure Associated
with Extratropical Transition
- Dzuy Nguyen,
- Benjamin Schenkel
Abstract
There is a lack of consensus on how tropical cyclone outer winds may
change, if at all, due to extratropical transition. Hence, this study
examines changes in North Atlantic tropical cyclone outer size and
structure using a large, multidecadal sample of cases from reanalysis
data. These results suggest that tropical cyclone outer size and
structure typically remain unchanged until after extratropical
transition end. In those minority of cases with strong outer size growth
during extratropical transition, increases in tropical cyclone outer
winds begin first in the lower troposphere during ET and build upwards
over time. This broadening of the azimuthal-mean outer winds is also
associated with an increasingly asymmetric outer wind field with the
strongest winds concentrated downstream of the tropical cyclone. These
storms that grow most strongly during transition are typically smaller
at transition start and eventually become embedded in more strongly
baroclinic environments before extratropical transition end.07 Aug 2024Submitted to ESS Open Archive 08 Aug 2024Published in ESS Open Archive