Effects of Taiwan orography on the motion and structure of typhoons

Approved for public release; distribution is unlimited. === Effects of steep island terrain on typhoon motion and structure changes are studied by both observational analyses and numerical simulations. The analyses involve calculation of center position deviations from a second- order polynomial cur...

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Main Author: Yeh, Tien-Chiang
Other Authors: Chang, Chih-Pei
Language:en_US
Published: Monterey, California. Naval Postgraduate School 2014
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10945/38515
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spelling ndltd-nps.edu-oai-calhoun.nps.edu-10945-385152014-11-27T16:19:13Z Effects of Taiwan orography on the motion and structure of typhoons Yeh, Tien-Chiang Chang, Chih-Pei Elsberry, Russell L. Naval Postgraduate School (U.S.) Department of Meteorology Approved for public release; distribution is unlimited. Effects of steep island terrain on typhoon motion and structure changes are studied by both observational analyses and numerical simulations. The analyses involve calculation of center position deviations from a second- order polynomial curve fitted to the best tracks, and an empirical orthogonal function analysis to determine the terrain-induced surface structures. The simulations use a limited-area model, with a elliptical-shaped barrier and a 'spun-up vortex' to represent the typhoon, to demonstrate the sensitivity on track and structure relative to vortex intensity, approach direction and translation speed. Both observational and simulation studies show that the orography induces significant track deflections and structure distortions, especially for a weaker and slowly moving typhoon approaching central or southern Taiwan. As the typhoon approaches, the outer edge of the circulation accentuates the blocking effect of the barrier. Asymmetric gyres are induced by a vortex-terrain interaction as the vortex moves closer to the barrier, which accounts for the significant track deflections from a simple barrier effect. The simulations suggest that a center-following algorithm based on the wind field would be more representative than on the pressure field. A track discontinuity occurs when the secondary vortex created from flow deflections around the barrier becomes the primary center downstream. 2014-01-29T23:37:41Z 2014-01-29T23:37:41Z 1992-12 Thesis http://hdl.handle.net/10945/38515 en_US Copyright is reserved by the coypright owner. Monterey, California. Naval Postgraduate School
collection NDLTD
language en_US
sources NDLTD
description Approved for public release; distribution is unlimited. === Effects of steep island terrain on typhoon motion and structure changes are studied by both observational analyses and numerical simulations. The analyses involve calculation of center position deviations from a second- order polynomial curve fitted to the best tracks, and an empirical orthogonal function analysis to determine the terrain-induced surface structures. The simulations use a limited-area model, with a elliptical-shaped barrier and a 'spun-up vortex' to represent the typhoon, to demonstrate the sensitivity on track and structure relative to vortex intensity, approach direction and translation speed. Both observational and simulation studies show that the orography induces significant track deflections and structure distortions, especially for a weaker and slowly moving typhoon approaching central or southern Taiwan. As the typhoon approaches, the outer edge of the circulation accentuates the blocking effect of the barrier. Asymmetric gyres are induced by a vortex-terrain interaction as the vortex moves closer to the barrier, which accounts for the significant track deflections from a simple barrier effect. The simulations suggest that a center-following algorithm based on the wind field would be more representative than on the pressure field. A track discontinuity occurs when the secondary vortex created from flow deflections around the barrier becomes the primary center downstream.
author2 Chang, Chih-Pei
author_facet Chang, Chih-Pei
Yeh, Tien-Chiang
author Yeh, Tien-Chiang
spellingShingle Yeh, Tien-Chiang
Effects of Taiwan orography on the motion and structure of typhoons
author_sort Yeh, Tien-Chiang
title Effects of Taiwan orography on the motion and structure of typhoons
title_short Effects of Taiwan orography on the motion and structure of typhoons
title_full Effects of Taiwan orography on the motion and structure of typhoons
title_fullStr Effects of Taiwan orography on the motion and structure of typhoons
title_full_unstemmed Effects of Taiwan orography on the motion and structure of typhoons
title_sort effects of taiwan orography on the motion and structure of typhoons
publisher Monterey, California. Naval Postgraduate School
publishDate 2014
url http://hdl.handle.net/10945/38515
work_keys_str_mv AT yehtienchiang effectsoftaiwanorographyonthemotionandstructureoftyphoons
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