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The physics of ocean wave evolution within tropical cyclones

Ali Tamizi, Jose-Henrique Alves, Ian R. Young

2021Journal of Physical Oceanography26 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Abstract A series of numerical experiments with the WAVEWATCH III spectral wave model are used to investigate the physics of wave evolution in tropical cyclones. Buoy observations show that tropical cyclone wave spectra are directionally skewed with a continuum of energy between locally generated wind-sea and remotely generated waves. These systems are often separated by more than 90 0 . The model spectra are consistent with the observed buoy data and are shown to be governed by nonlinear wave-wave interactions which result in a cascade of energy from the wind-sea to the remotely generated spectral peak. The peak waves act in a “parasitic” manner taking energy from the wind-sea to maintain their growth. The critical role of nonlinear processes explains why one-dimensional tropical cyclone spectra have characteristics very similar to fetch-limited waves, even though the generation system is far more complex. The results also provide strong validation of the critical role nonlinear interactions play in wind-wave evolution.

Topics & Concepts

Tropical cycloneBuoyWind waveFetchMeteorologyWave modelEnergy cascadePhysicsCascadeGeologyBreaking waveClimatologySpectral lineRogue waveNonlinear systemGeophysicsEnvironmental scienceOceanographyWave propagationAstronomyEngineeringQuantum mechanicsTurbulenceChemical engineeringOcean Waves and Remote SensingTropical and Extratropical Cyclones ResearchCoastal and Marine Dynamics
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