Japan Geoscience Union Meeting 2025

Presentation information

[J] Oral

A (Atmospheric and Hydrospheric Sciences ) » A-CG Complex & General

[A-CG49] Kuroshio Large Meander

Mon. May 26, 2025 9:00 AM - 10:30 AM 101 (International Conference Hall, Makuhari Messe)

convener:Hidetaka Hirata(Rissho University), Hatsumi Nishikawa(Japan Agency for Marine-Earth Science and Technology), Yuma Kawakami(Meteorological Research Institute), Daiki Ito(Fisheries Resources Institute, Japan Fisheries Research and Education Agency), Chairperson:Yuma Kawakami(Meteorological Research Institute), Hidetaka Hirata(Rissho University)

10:00 AM - 10:15 AM

[ACG49-05] Reduction of Rainfall during Typhoon Passage by Warm Ocean Core Associated with Kuroshio Large Meander: A Case Study of Typhoon Talas (2011)

*Naoki Morita1, Yoshihiro Tachibana1, Yuta Ando2, Kasuga Satoru1, Takashi Mochizuki2 (1.Mie University Graduate School of Bioresources, 2.Department of Earth and Planetary Sciences, Kyushu University)


Keywords:Kuroshio large meander, SST, Typhoon Talas, Heavy rainfall

Typhoon intensity and rainfall depend on sea surface temperature (SST). SSTs in southern Japan, which is often hit by typhoons, are likely influenced by the path of the Kuroshio, a warm ocean current. When the Kuroshio makes a large meander, it creates a local warm water core near the Japanese coast. Here, we show that the warm core may reduce rainfall through numerical experiments using Typhoon Talas, which caused unprecedented damage in 2011. The warm core, with SSTs about 2 {degree sign}C higher than the surrounding water, reduces rainfall by 4% (28 mm). The mechanism is as follows. As the north side of the center of a typhoon has an easterly wind direction, the east coast is subjected to onshore winds, which intensify the horizontal water vapor flux toward land, resulting in heavy rainfall. If there is a warm core to the north of the typhoon, the pressure adjustment mechanism above the warm core, which lowers the sea level pressure, causes a cyclonic wind anomaly, which strengthens the offshore wind in the southern part of the warm core, leading to a local weakening of the onshore wind. The effect of the weakened onshore wind is stronger than that of the increase in water vapor evaporating from the warm core, resulting in reduced horizontal water vapor flux inflow and reduced precipitation. Local-scale SST anomalies must thus be considered in the prediction of local precipitation. Such reverse SST effects are likely general to another meteorological phenomenon not limited to the investigated typhoon.