Condensation mass sink and intensification of tropical storms
Anastassia M. Makarieva, Andrei V. Nefiodov

TL;DR
This study demonstrates that condensation-induced mass sinks are crucial for tropical storm intensification, providing a positive feedback mechanism that enhances storm strength and compactness, supported by observational analysis and numerical modeling.
Contribution
It reveals the fundamental role of condensation mass sinks in tropical storm intensification, challenging previous assumptions about their insignificance.
Findings
Mass sink correlates with maximum precipitation and intensification rate.
Numerical models show storms without mass sink develop more slowly or not at all.
Condensation mass sink drives a positive feedback, leading to more compact storms.
Abstract
Intensification of tropical storms measured as the central pressure tendency represents a subtle imbalance, of the order of , between the inflow and outflow of air in the storm core. Factors driving this imbalance, especially in cases of rapid intensification, remain elusive. Here, using an analysis of intensification rates and precipitation in North Atlantic cyclones, it is shown that the storms on average deepen at a rate with which maximum local precipitation removes mass from the atmospheric column. Means for lifetime maximum intensification rate and maximum concurrent precipitation (multiplied by the acceleration of gravity) are, respectively, and hPa day. This equivalence is not limited to average values: both intensification rates and precipitation have the same dependence on the inverse radius of maximum wind. It is further shown using a numerical model…
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Taxonomy
TopicsTropical and Extratropical Cyclones Research · Flood Risk Assessment and Management · Meteorological Phenomena and Simulations
