Abstract

Abstract Radar imagery of some double-eyewall tropical cyclones shows that the inner eyewalls become elliptical prior to their dissipation. These elliptical features indicate that the barotropic instability (BI) across the moat (aka, type-2 BI) may play a role in the process. To investigate the mechanism for dissipation, a WRF simulation of Hurricane Wilma (2005) is performed. The results reveal an elliptical elongation of the inner eyewall and a change in the structure of the radial flow from wavenumber (WN) 1 to WN 2 at the lower levels. A linear stability analysis as well as idealized nonlinear experiments using a nondivergent barotropic vorticity model initialized with the vorticity fields before the change in the dominant wavenumber of the radial flow are presented with the results supporting the presence of a type-2 BI at the lower levels. The accompanying WN-2 radial flow is also found to dilute the vorticity within the inner eyewall and the eye. However, this dilution is not seen at higher levels as the type-2 BI becomes weak and short lived at the middle levels and reaches its weakest strength at the upper levels. This phenomenon is traced to the fact that a higher growth rate comes with a narrower moat for type-2 BI. As the outward slope of the outer eyewall is larger than that of the inner eyewall, the moat width increases with height so that the growth rate decreases with height. The results presented here thus highlight the potential role played by the barotropic instability across the moat in inner eyewall dissipation.

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