Abstract

Abstract. Tropical cyclones (TCs) are deep convective synoptic-scale systems that play an important role in modifying the thermal structure, tropical tropopause parameters and hence also modify stratosphere–troposphere exchange (STE) processes. In the present study, high vertical resolution and high accuracy measurements from COSMIC Global Positioning System (GPS) radio occultation (RO) measurements are used to investigate and quantify the effect of tropical cyclones that occurred over Bay of Bengal and Arabian Sea in the last decade on the tropical tropopause parameters. The tropopause parameters include cold-point tropopause altitude (CPH) and temperature (CPT), lapse-rate tropopause altitude (LRH) and temperature (LRT) and the thickness of the tropical tropopause layer (TTL), that is defined as the layer between convective outflow level (COH) and CPH, obtained from GPS RO data. From all the TC events, we generate the mean cyclone-centred composite structure for the tropopause parameters and removed it from the climatological mean obtained from averaging the GPS RO data from 2002 to 2013. Since the TCs include eye, eye walls and deep convective bands, we obtained the tropopause parameters based on radial distance from the cyclone eye. In general, decrease in the CPH in the eye is noticed as expected. However, as the distance from the cyclone eye increases by 300, 400, and 500 km, an enhancement in CPH (CPT) and LRH (LRT) is observed. Lowering of CPH (0.6 km) and LRH (0.4 km) values with coldest CPT and LRT (2–3 K) within a 500 km radius of the TC centre is noticed. Higher (2 km) COH leading to the lowering of TTL thickness (2–3 km) is clearly observed. There are multiple tropopause structures in the profiles of temperature obtained within 100 km from the centre of the TC. These changes in the tropopause parameters are expected to influence the water vapour transport from the troposphere to the lower stratosphere, and ozone from the lower stratosphere to the upper troposphere, hence influencing STE processes.

Highlights

  • Tropical cyclones (TCs) are one of the most dangerous natural and deep convective synoptic-scale systems that occur throughout the tropical region globally (Emanuel, 2005)

  • Though it is difficult to draw any conclusions from this figure as occultations are sparse, it is clear that CPH and LRH are slightly lower (∼ 17.25 km) within 500 km, and higher (> 17.5 km) further away from the centre when compared to the CPH and LRH around 1000 km

  • We investigated and quantified the effects of tropical cyclones that occurred between 2007 and 2013 on the tropical tropopause parameters obtained from simultaneous high vertical resolution and high accuracy COSMIC Global Positioning System (GPS) radio occultation (RO) measurements

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Summary

Introduction

Tropical cyclones (TCs) are one of the most dangerous natural and deep convective synoptic-scale systems that occur throughout the tropical region globally (Emanuel, 2005). Every year, they cause considerable loss of life and damage to property. Over the Indian region, these TCs occur during the pre-monsoon (April–May), early monsoon (June) and post-monsoon (September–November) seasons (Pattnaik and Rama Rao, 2008). They persist for a few days to weeks and have large convective activity around the eye, with a horizontal scale of hundreds of kilometres.

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