Abstract
AbstractAn improved high-resolution satellite enthalpy flux dataset is employed to study the composites of initial (i.e., t = 0 h) latent heat flux (LHF), sensible heat flux (SHF), and their bulk variables associated with four intensity-change categories of tropical cyclones (TCs) over the western North Pacific Ocean—rapidly intensifying (RI), slowly intensifying, neutral, and weakening—in a vertical wind shear–relative coordinate system with horizontal dimensions normalized by the radius of maximum wind. Results show that RI TCs are associated with significantly higher LHF and SHF in all TC environments than non-RI TCs, which are mainly attributable to the air–sea humidity difference (DQ) and the air–sea temperature difference (DT), respectively. Higher DQ and DT are primarily due to significantly higher sea surface temperature (SST) underlying RI TCs, emphasizing the crucial role of SST in supplying more energy to TCs that undergo rapid intensification, in which LHF plays a more important role than SHF. Relative to non-RI TCs, LHF and SHF for RI TCs show a more symmetric pattern. The magnitude and pattern of air–sea enthalpy flux could serve as potential predictors for rapid intensification of TCs.
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