Abstract

Abstract. Mechanisms driving the intensification and propagation direction of extratropical cyclones are an active field of research. Dry-dynamic forcing factors have been established as fundamental drivers of the deepening and propagation of extratropical cyclones, but their climatological interplay, geographical distribution, and relatedness to the observed cyclone deepening and propagation direction remain unknown. This study considers two key dry-dynamic forcing factors, the Eady growth rate (EGR) and the upper-level induced quasi-geostrophic lifting (QGω), and relates them to the surface deepening rates and the propagation direction during the cyclones' growth phase. To this aim, a feature-based cyclone tracking is used, and the forcing environment is climatologically analysed based on ERA-Interim data. The interplay is visualized by means of a forcing histogram, which allows one to identify different combinations of EGR and QGω and their combined influence on the cyclone deepening (12 h sea-level pressure change) and propagation direction. The key results of the study are as follows. (i) The geographical locations of four different forcing categories, corresponding to cyclone growth in environments characterized by low QGω and low EGR (Q↓E↓), low QGω but high EGR (Q↓E↑), high QGω and low EGR (Q↑E↓), and high QGω and EGR (Q↑E↑), display distinct hot spots with only mild overlaps. For instance, cyclone growth in a Q↑E↑ forcing environment is found in the entrance regions of the North Pacific and Atlantic storm tracks. Category Q↓E↑ is typically found over continental North America, along the southern tip of Greenland, over parts of East Asia, and over the western North Pacific. In contrast, category Q↑E↓ dominates the subtropics. (ii) The four categories are associated with different stages of the cyclones' growth phase: large EGR forcing typically occurs earlier, during the growth phase at genesis, while large QGω forcing attains its maximum amplitude later towards maturity. (iii) Poleward cyclone propagation is strongest over the North Pacific and North Atlantic, and the poleward propagation tendency becomes more pronounced as the deepening rate gets larger. Zonal, or even equatorward, propagation on the other hand is characteristic for cyclones developing in the lee of mountain ranges, e.g. to the lee of the Rocky Mountains. The exact location of maximum QGω forcing relative to the surface cyclone centre is found to be a good indicator for the direction of propagation, while no information on the propagation direction can be inferred from the EGR. Ultimately, the strength of the poleward propagation and of the deepening is inherently connected to the two dry-dynamic forcing factors, which allow cyclone development in distinct environments to effectively be identified.

Highlights

  • Not reasonable to only consider the values of QGω and Eady growth rate (EGR) at the cyclone’s centre, which is defined by the location of the minimum sea level pressure (SLP), because the cyclone growth and propagation are determined by its larger environment

  • We analysed the environment during the cyclone growth period in terms of the dry-dynamic forcing, its variability, and its relationship with the cyclone propagation direction

  • Each time step along every cyclone track was characterized in terms of its 12 h deepening rate ( SLP), the upper-level QG forcing for ascent (QGω), the lowertropospheric Eady growth rate (EGR), and the propagation direction

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Summary

Introduction

Extratropical cyclones tend to grow and propagate in narrow latitudinal bands known as the storm tracks (Jones and Simmonds, 1993; Chang et al, 2002; Hoskins and Hodges, 2002; Wernli and Schwierz, 2006), but they occur frequently outside of the main oceanic storm tracks, for example, in subtropical (Otkin and Martin, 2004; Evans and Guishard, 2009; Guishard et al, 2009; Evans and Braun, 2012) and in polar environments (Mansfield, 1974; Rasmussen and Turner, 2003; Zahn and von Storch, 2008; Simmonds and Rudeva, 2012) During their life cycle, the deepening of extratropical cyclones is supported by a combination of upper- and lower-level forcing mechanisms, and the relative contribu-. Rapid deepening and poleward propagation are inherently connected In this climatological analysis, we quantify the regional variability of the upper- and lower-level forcing mechanisms during the growth phase, i.e. between genesis and maturity, of extratropical cyclones and systematically link this information with the direction of propagation.

ERA-Interim and dry-dynamic forcing
Cyclone climatology and time normalization
Dry-dynamic forcing categories
Dry-dynamic forcing during cyclone growth
Geographical distribution of dry-dynamic forcing
Temporal evolution of dry-dynamic forcing
Cyclone-centred composites
Propagation angle and deepening rates
Cyclone-centred composites for poleward and eastward propagation
Findings
Conclusions
Full Text
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