Abstract

Abstract Using a time-dependent axisymmetric numerical model, the authors evaluate whether high-entropy air near the surface in hurricane eyes can substantially increase hurricanes’ maximum intensity. This local high-entropy anomaly is ultimately created by surface entropy fluxes in the eye. Therefore, simulations are conducted in which these surface fluxes are set to zero; results show that the high-entropy anomaly is eliminated, yet the axisymmetric tangential wind speed is only slightly weakened (by ∼4%, on average). These results contradict the hypothesis that transport of high-entropy air from the eye into the eyewall can significantly increase the maximum axisymmetric intensity of hurricanes. In fact, all simulations (with or without high-entropy anomalies) have an intensity that is 25–30 m s−1 higher than Emanuel’s theoretical maximum intensity. Further analysis demonstrates that less then 3% of the total surface-entropy input to the hurricane comes from the eye, and therefore the total magnitude of entropy transport between the eye and eyewall is a negligible component of the entropy budget of the simulated hurricanes. This latter finding is consistent with a cursory comparison with observations.

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