Tropical Cyclone Genesis Factors in Simulations of the Last Glacial Maximum Academic Article uri icon

abstract

  • Abstract Large-scale environmental factors that favor tropical cyclogenesis are calculated and examined in simulations of the Last Glacial Maximum (LGM) from the Paleoclimate Modelling Intercomparison Project Phase 2 (PMIP2). Despite universally colder conditions at the LGM, values of tropical cyclone potential intensity, which both serves as an upper bound on thermodynamically achievable intensity and indicates regions supportive of the deep convection required, are broadly similar in magnitude to those in preindustrial era control simulation. Some regions, including large areas of the central and western North Pacific, feature higher potential intensities at the LGM than they do in the control runs, while other regions including much of the Atlantic and Indian Oceans are lower. Changes in potential intensity are strongly correlated with the degree of surface cooling during the LGM. Additionally, two thermodynamic parametersone that measures midtropospheric entropy deficits relevant for tropical cyclogenesis and another related to the time required for genesisare broadly more favorable in the LGM simulation than in the preindustrial era control. A genesis potential index yields higher values for the LGM in much of the western Pacific, a feature common to nearly all of the individual models examined.

published proceedings

  • JOURNAL OF CLIMATE

author list (cited authors)

  • Korty, R. L., Camargo, S. J., & Galewsky, J.

citation count

  • 46

complete list of authors

  • Korty, Robert L||Camargo, Suzana J||Galewsky, Joseph

publication date

  • June 2012