Search Results

You are looking at 1 - 10 of 30 items for :

  • Author or Editor: James L. Franklin x
  • Monthly Weather Review x
  • Refine by Access: All Content x
Clear All Modify Search
James L. Franklin

Abstract

Omega dropwindsonde (ODW) observations from three synoptic-flow experiments in environment of Hurricane Josephine have been analyzed in a research mode using an objective analysis procedure. The nominal times of the analyses are 0000 UTC 10, 11, and 12 October 1984. The filtered, three-dimensional analyses have been used as a basis for several diagnostic and prognostic calculations relating to the motion of the hurricane.

Examination of Josephine's environment revealed a strong variability of the flow with distance from the storm center and with pressure. Josephine moved at right angles to the azimuthally averaged wind at 500 mb; the vortex motion was more consistent with the flow near 700 mb. Forecasts made with a barotropic forecast model showed a high sensitivity of the forecast track to the vertical layer used in the initial analysis. These results demonstrate the potential value of vertical sounding information from the ODWs, and show that single-level midtropospheric information is not always representative of a hurricane's environment flow.

On each of the three days, the motion of Josephine deviated significantly from its environmental “steering,” as measured by an azimuthal average of the 300–850 mb mean flow over the 5°–7° radial band. This deviation from steering (the so-called “propagation” vector) was oriented with components parallel and to the left of the gradient of absolute vorticity in the asymmetric wind field. The magnitude of the propagation was proportional to the strength of the absolute vorticity gradient. These results are consistent with many barotropic modeling studies.

Full access
Lloyd J. Shapiro
and
James L. Franklin

Abstract

Potential vorticity (PV) analysts for Hurricane Gloria of 1985 are derived from nested objective wind analyses of Omega dropwindsonde and airborne Doppler radar data. The analyses resolve eyewall-scale features in the inner vortex core and embed analyses of these features within the larger-scale environment. Since three-dimensional geopotential height fields required for evaluation of PV are not available in the core, they are derived using the balance equation. In the process of deriving the heights, the degree of gradient balance is evaluated. The 500-mb tangential winds in the core, averaged azimuthally on the four cardinal points, are close to gradient balance outside the radius of maximum wind.

The resulting depiction of PV is the first presented for a real hurricane. Due to data deficiencies immediately outside the Doppler region, as well as inside the eye, smoothing of the wind data using a filter with a minimum 25-km spatial scale is required to derive a balanced geopotential height distribution consistent with a statically stable vortex. The large-scale PV distribution evidences asymmetries in the middle and upper troposphere that appear to be associated with Gloria's translation to the northwest. Eyewall-scale PV in the core and PY of the azimuthally averaged vortex are also presented.

Full access
James L. Franklin
and
Stephen J. Lord

Abstract

Synoptic-wale thermodynamic fields in the environment of Hurricane Debby (1982) determined from two sets of VAS soundings (VAS1, VAS2) are compared with those obtained from in-situ data (INS). VAS1 sounding were derived from an iterative solution of the radiative transfer equation with manual quality control. VAS2 soundings, which represent the present state-of-the-art, were derived from a simultaneous solution of the transfer equation with objective quality control. In situ data were obtained primarily from Omega dropwindsondes. Comparisons are made for 0000 UTC 16 September 1982 at the mandatory pressure levels up to 400 mb. The integrated effect of VAS-INS differences is estimated by comparing 400 mb geopotential height fields and their associated gradient winds.

The comparisons show that the VAS1-INS temperature differences are not spatially uniform at most levels, due largely to the influence of moisture. The quality of the VAS2 data is much improved over VAS1; the effect of moisture is not noticeable. However, the VAS2 analyses still show spatially nonuniform differences from INS at some levels. Thus, VAS gradient data may be of irregular quality on the synoptic scale. Geopotential height fields at 400 mb imply gradient wind differences from INS of up to 12 m s−1 for VAS 1 and 6 m s−1 for VAS2. The VAS2 sounding set could be improved further by the use of manual data editing, and a more accurate first-guess of the surface temperature analysis.

Full access
Stephen J. Lord
and
James L. Franklin

Abstract

A three-dimensional, nested analysis of wind fields in the environment of Hurricane Debby (1982) has been completed. The basic analysis tool uses a two-dimensional least-squares fitting algorithm combined with a derivative constraint that acts as a spatial low-pass filter on the analyzed field. Gridded results of horizontally analyzed fields are combined into vertical cross sections and then analyzed to produce vertical continuity. Consequently, a three-dimensional analysis is obtained.

The database for the analysis comes primarily from Omega dropwindsondes (ODWs), rawinsondes, and satellite-derived winds above 400 mb in the environment of Hurricane Debby near 0000 UTC 16 September 1982. Since these data come from many different sources, and thus are not evenly distributed in the horizontal or vertical, techniques have been developed to alleviate difficulties associated with inhomogeneous data. The analyzed wind fields provide an independent evaluation of satellite-derived winds at and below 400 mb.

General features of the environmental wind fields surrounding Debby are described. The wind analyses are then used to diagnose terms in the vorticity equation. The spatial orientation of a calculated dipole in the horizontal vorticity flux convergence term indicates that it is an approximate indicator of Debby's observed short-term motion.

Finally, to provide an initial assessment of the wind analysis quality, experimental track forecasts with a barotropic model are performed with the layer-mean wind fields and operationally available data outside the analysis domain. Initial errors in the forecast tracks are directly related to the orientation of the diagnosed vorticity flux convergence dipole. The research wind analysis results in a substantial reduction in track error for short-term (12 h) forecasts compared to analyses from operationally available data. This reduction is due to an improved representation of the wind fields in the near-storm environment.

Full access
James L. Franklin
and
Mark DeMaria

Abstract

A scarcity of observations in the hurricane environment is one factor believed to be limiting the improvement in hurricane track forecast accuracy. Since 1982, the Hurricane Research Division (HRD) of the NOAA Atlantic Oceanographic and Meteorological Laboratory has conducted 14 experiments to determine the wind and thermodynamic fields within about 1000 km of tropical cyclones in the Atlantic basin. During these synoptic-flow experiments, Omega dropwindsondes (ODWs) are released from the two NOAA WP-3D research aircraft over a 9–10-h period in the hurricane environment. The ODWs measure pressure, temperature, humidity, and wind as they descend from flight level (about 400 mb) to the surface. These data are then transmitted in real time to the National Hurricane Center (NHC) and the National Meteorological Center (NMC).

Recently, a barotropic, nested, spectral hurricane track forecasting model, VICBAR, has been developed at HRD and tested quasi-operationally during the 1989 and 1990 hurricane seasons. Forecasts from this model have compared favorably with other models run at NHC and NMC. In this study, the VICBAR model is used to evaluate the impact of ODW data on track forecast error for the 14 HRD synoptic-flow experiments.

The ODW data produced highly consistent reductions in track forecast errors in this sample of cases. Forecast improvements due to single-level midtropospheric (aircraft) data were significantly smaller than those due to the ODWs. At the important verification times of 24–36 h (prior to landfall), when the decision to issue a hurricane warning is being made, the ODWs reduced the model mean forecast error by 12%–16%. These improvements, statistically significant at the 99% level, are comparable to the total improvement in normalized NHC official 24-h forecast error occurring over the, past 20–25 years.

Full access
Stephen J. Lord
and
James L. Franklin

Abstract

A three-dimensional analysis of temperature and relative humidity in the environment of Hurricane Debby (1982) has been completed. Observations from Omega dropwindsondes (ODWs) within 1000 km of the storm have been combined with rawinsondes over the continental United States and the Caribbean and with observations from surface ships and aircraft data where possible.

The temperature and relative humidity analyses, together with wind analyses from a previous study, form a dataset that can be used an an initial condition in a multilevel prognostic model when combined with analyses over area larger than our analysis domain. In this paper a series of diagnostic tests has been applied to the dataset to evaluate its performance without using a prognostic model. These tests include horizontal maps of the moist convective instability, calculation of the heat and moisture budgets in the vicinity of Bermuda, which was 350 km to the northeast of the storm center, and diagnosis of precipitation from these budgets and from the Arakawa-Schubert cumulus parameterization.

Results show that the horizontal distribution of moist convective instability is strongly affected by the low-level moisture field upstream of the main inflow region to the storm. The total surface heat flux, estimated with a bulk aerodynamic method, matches the vertically integrated eddy flux of moist static energy to within observational errors. Precipitation estimates from the budgets give rates of approximately 20 mm day−1, which are consistent with an estimated rate from radar. Partition of the rainfall rate into convective scale and resolvable scale (stratiform) shows about equal contributions.

Our results lead us to believe that, within the limitations determined by the horizontal distribution of the observations, the final dataset for Hurricane Debby provides a realistic depiction of the various physical processes that were occurring in Debby's environment. Future work will include data sensitivity experiments with a three-dimensional forecast model.

Full access
Lloyd J. Shapiro
and
James L. Franklin

Abstract

A set of nine synoptic-flow cases, incorporating Omega dropwindsonde observations for six tropical storms and hurricanes, is used to deduce the three-dimensional distribution of potential vorticity (PV) that contributed to the deep-layer mean (DLM) wind that steered the cyclones. A piecewise inversion technique, the same as that previously applied by Shapiro to Hurricane Gloria of 1985, is used to derive the DLM wind induced by pieces of anomalous PV restricted to cylinders of different radii centered on each cyclone. The cylinder of PV that induces a DLM wind that best matches the observed DLM wind near the center of each cyclone is evaluated.

It is found that the results can be loosely placed into two categories describing the spatial scale of the PV anomalies that influenced the cyclone’s motion. Four of the cases, including Hurricane Gloria, had “local” control, with a good match (to within ∼40%) between the observed DLM wind near the cyclone center and the DLM wind attributable to a cylinder of PV with a given radius ⩽1500 km. Further decomposition of the PV anomaly into upper (400 mb and above) and lower levels (500 mb and below) indicates the dominance of upper-level features in steering two of the cyclones (Hurricanes Gloria of 1985 and Andrew of 1992), while Hurricane Debby of 1982 was steered by more barotropic features. These results supplement those found in other studies.

Five of the cases, by contrast, had “large-scale” control, with no cylinder of radius ⩽2000 km having a good match between the induced and observed DLM wind. Hurricanes Emily of 1987 and 1993 fell into this category, as did Hurricane Josephine of 1984. Implications of the results for guiding in situ wind measurements to improve hurricane track forecasts are discussed.

Full access
Christopher W. Landsea
and
James L. Franklin

Abstract

“Best tracks” are National Hurricane Center (NHC) poststorm analyses of the intensity, central pressure, position, and size of Atlantic and eastern North Pacific basin tropical and subtropical cyclones. This paper estimates the uncertainty (average error) for Atlantic basin best track parameters through a survey of the NHC Hurricane Specialists who maintain and update the Atlantic hurricane database. A comparison is then made with a survey conducted over a decade ago to qualitatively assess changes in the uncertainties. Finally, the implications of the uncertainty estimates for NHC analysis and forecast products as well as for the prediction goals of the Hurricane Forecast Improvement Program are discussed.

Full access
James L. Franklin
and
Daniel P. Brown

Abstract

The 2006 Atlantic hurricane season is summarized and the year’s tropical cyclones are described. A verification of National Hurricane Center official forecasts during 2006 is also presented. Ten cyclones attained tropical storm intensity in 2006. Of these, five became hurricanes and two became “major” hurricanes. Overall activity was near the long-term mean, but below the active levels of recent seasons. For the first time since 2001, no hurricanes made landfall in the United States. Elsewhere in the basin, hurricane-force winds were experienced in Bermuda (from Florence) and in the Azores (from Gordon). Official track forecast errors were smaller in 2006 than during the previous 5-yr period (by roughly 15%–20% out to 72 h), establishing new all-time lows at forecast projections through 72 h. Since 1990, 24–72-h official track forecast errors have been reduced by roughly 50%.

Full access
John L. Beven II
and
James L. Franklin

Abstract

The 1999 hurricane season in the eastern North Pacific is summarized, and individual tropical storms and hurricanes are described. Producing only nine named storms, the season tied 1996 as the second least active on record. Hurricane Dora was the strongest and longest-lived cyclone of the season. Hurricane Greg, the only cyclone to make landfall during the season, weakened to a tropical storm just before moving ashore in Baja California, Mexico. Fifteen deaths resulted from the tropical cyclones.

Full access