Abstract

Abstract This work investigates the rapid weakening (RW) processes of Typhoon Trami (2018) by examining sea surface temperature (SST) cooling based on air–sea coupled simulations during typhoon passage. The cold wake and Trami’s RW occurred as the storm was moving at a very slow translation speed. A marked structural change of Trami is found in a three-dimensional ocean-coupled model experiment during the RW stage, in which the convective clouds and convective bursts in the inner core of the simulated TC dramatically decrease, resulting in the loss of diabatic heating and leading to weakening of the TC. In the simulation, the enthalpy flux dramatically decreases in the inner core because of the SST cooling during the RW period, while a stable boundary layer (SBL) is formed in the TC’s inner-core region. The expanding SBL coverage stabilizes the atmosphere and suppresses convection in the inner core, leading to weakening of the storm. A more stable atmosphere in the cold wake is also identified by the inner-core dropsonde data from the field program of Tropical Cyclones-Pacific Asian Research Campaign for Improvement of Intensity Estimations/Forecasts. The strong SST cooling also changes the evolution of Trami’s eyewall replacement cycle (ERC) and limits the eyewall contraction after the ERC.

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