Abstract

AbstractUnder the background of global climate change, typhoons have been attracting increasing attention due to their extraordinary destructive potential and great impact on the coastal areas of the South China Sea. Although the risk of strong winds related to typhoons has long been of interest, less is known about the underlying mechanism responsible for the severe near‐surface winds. Using eddy covariance data collected at four different heights on a 365‐m meteorological tower located in a coastal region, the characteristics of the convective typhoon boundary layer and the associated turbulence structures are compared with their counterparts in the “textbook” dynamically unstable boundary layer. In the convective typhoon boundary layer, bulk wind shear predominates the generation of mechanical turbulence, enhancing the vertical correlation between vertical layers. The spectral analysis highlights the salient features of turbulent structures under the convective typhoon boundary layer, confirming that the gust disturbance with the nondimensional frequency ranging from 0.003 to 0.3 modulates not only turbulent transports but also the horizontal flow. Such gusts with reduced phase difference enhance the downward momentum transport, mainly responsible for the maintenance of the strong near‐surface winds during typhoon landfalls.

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