Abstract

Theory indicates that tropical cyclone intensity should respond to changes in the vertical temperature profile. While the sensitivity of tropical cyclone intensity to sea surface temperature is well understood, less is known about sensitivity to the temperature profile. In this paper, we combine historical data analysis and idealised modelling to explore the extent to which historical tropospheric warming and lower stratospheric cooling can explain observed trends in the tropical cyclone intensity distribution. Observations and modelling agree that historical global temperature profile changes coincide with higher lifetime maximum intensities. But observations suggest the response depends on the tropical cyclone intensity itself. Historical lower- and upper-tropospheric temperatures in hurricane environments have warmed significantly faster than the tropical mean. In addition, hurricane-strength storms have intensified at twice the rate of weaker storms per unit warming at the surface and at 300-hPa. Idealized simulations respond in the expected sense to various imposed changes in the temperature profile and agree with tropical cyclones operating as heat engines. Yet lower stratospheric temperature changes have little influence. Idealised modelling further shows an increasing altitude of the TC outflow but little change in outflow temperature. This enables increased efficiency for strong tropical cyclones despite the warming upper troposphere. Observed sensitivities are generally larger than modelled sensitivities, suggesting that observed tropical cyclone intensity change responds to a combination of the temperature profile change and other environmental factors.

Highlights

  • Understanding how tropical cyclones (TCs) and their impacts respond to climate change is of critical scientific and societal importance (e.g., Knutson et al, 2020)

  • We explore whether historic temperature profile changes are sufficient to explain past trends in the TC intensity distribution

  • We focus on a global-scale analysis over a 37-year historical period - scales at which TC intensity should be more strongly constrained by thermodynamic change than by other environmental or geographic factors (Deser et al, 2012)

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Summary

Introduction

Understanding how tropical cyclones (TCs) and their impacts respond to climate change is of critical scientific and societal importance (e.g., Knutson et al, 2020). We use observations and idealized models to examine the TC response to changes in the environmental temperature profile. Historical global surface temperature trend analyses show significant warming since the mid 1970s, attributed to anthropogenic forcing (Meehl et al, 2004; 2012). Since the mid 1970s most datasets show that the troposphere has warmed while the lower stratosphere has cooled (e.g., Thompson et al, 2012; Philipona et al, 2018). Analysing these trends is challenging in the global tropics because of sparse long-term historical temperature profile records and the potential for artificial trends driven by observing system changes (Thorne et al, 2011)

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