JpGU-AGU Joint Meeting 2020

講演情報

[E] 口頭発表

セッション記号 A (大気水圏科学) » A-AS 大気科学・気象学・大気環境

[A-AS06] 台風研究の新展開~過去・現在・未来

コンビーナ:宮本 佳明(慶應義塾大学 環境情報学部)、金田 幸恵(名古屋大学宇宙地球環境研究所)、和田 章義(気象研究所台風・災害気象研究部)、伊藤 耕介(琉球大学)

[AAS06-09] Warm ocean conditions and increased typhoon intensity in 2019

*和田 章義1 (1.気象研究所台風・災害気象研究部)

キーワード:台風、海洋貯熱量、数値シミュレーション

It is sometimes pointed out that the increase in the upper-ocean temperature, particularly sea surface temperature, is one of the factors that cause stronger landfalling typhoons such as FAXAI and HAGIBIS in 2019.Since these landfalling typhoons cause serious disasters, it is necessary to explore the effects of increases in the upper-ocean temperature on the typhoons. First, an empirical orthogonal function (EOF) analysis method was applied for tropical cyclone thermal potential (TCHP) data from 1982 to 2019 to investigate upper ocean temperature variations. From the EOF analysis, we can find the correlation map that TCHP increased in almost all areas in the North Pacific as the second mode, while the first mode shows the variation corresponding to the El Nino-Southern Oscillation. In 2019, we find that the second mode is dominant. In order to investigate the impact of the increase in the upper-ocean temperature on typhoons in 2019, numerical simulations were conducted for Typhoons FAXAI and HAGIBIS with a nonhydrostatic atmosphere model and the atmosphere-wave-ocean coupled model, and with two different oceanic initial conditions. One oceanic initial condition is the average from 1982 to 2019, while the other is the daily operational oceanic analysis data in the Japan Meteorological Agency. The simulation results show that the difference in track predictions between the four simulations was very small although all simulated tracks showed the westward errors. However, the simulated central pressures and the simulated maximum wind speeds show that the simulated typhoon intensity became weak when both the coupled model and the average from 1982 to 2019 were used. In some experiments, there was no systematic difference between the four experiments as to the accumulated precipitation distribution over the Japanese archipelago. Therefore, the effect of the increase in the upper-ocean temperature on landfalling typhoons can be found only in the intensity.