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Determinant Role of Aerosols From Industrial Sources in Hurricane Harvey's Catastrophe

Bowen Pan, Yuan Wang, Timothy Logan, Jen‐Shan Hsieh, Jonathan H. Jiang, Yixin Li, Renyi Zhang

2020Geophysical Research Letters25 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Abstract The destructive power of tropical cyclones is driven by latent heat released from water condensation and is inevitably linked to the abundance of aerosols as cloud condensation nuclei. However, the aerosol effects are unaccounted for in most operational hurricane forecast models. We combined multisource measurements and cloud‐resolving model simulations to show fundamentally altered cloud microphysical and thermodynamic processes by anthropogenic aerosols during Hurricane Harvey. Our observational analyses reveal intense lightning and precipitation in the proximity of Houston industrial areas, and these hot spots exhibit a striking geographic similarity to a climatological maximum of lightning flash density in the south‐central United States. Our ensemble cloud‐resolving simulations of Hurricane Harvey indicate that aerosols increase precipitation and lightning by a factor of 2 in the Houston urban area, unraveling the key anthropogenic factor in regulating flooding during this weather extreme.

Topics & Concepts

Environmental scienceLightning (connector)AerosolPrecipitationCloud condensation nucleiMeteorologyTropical cycloneClimatologyAtmospheric sciencesSevere weatherStormGeologyGeographyPower (physics)PhysicsQuantum mechanicsTropical and Extratropical Cyclones ResearchMeteorological Phenomena and SimulationsClimate variability and models
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