Abstract

Abstract What determines the vortex size at the small-amplitude stage of spontaneous tropical cyclogenesis remains unclear. A doubly periodic domain is a standard setup for numerically studying this problem, but the convectively coupled standing waves inherent to the setup could directly trigger vortices, rendering an unrealistic path for tropical cyclogenesis. We increase the Coriolis parameter to suppress the wave and double the longwave radiative feedback to make the more realistic moisture–radiation instability dominant. Experiments show that the moisture–radiation instability has a short-wavelength cutoff due to the smoothing effect of convective dynamics, which includes the nonlocal convective triggering by cold pools and the nonlocal longwave radiative effect of anvil clouds. By approximating the spread of convective activity as a Gaussian filter on the column humidity, we derive a bulk convective spreading length lcp+av to parameterize the combined effect of cold pools and anvils. Using a novel diagnostic method, lcp+av is shown to be around 10 km. The contribution of cold pools and anvil clouds to convective spreading is comparable in the doubled radiative feedback experiments. An extrapolation to the normal radiative feedback state shows the anvil clouds play a smaller yet nonnegligible role.

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