african easterly waves and atlantic hurricanes · 2010. 11. 23. · two different regimes of...

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African Easterly Waves and Atlantic Hurricanes Rosana Nieto Ferreira Tom Rickenbach East Carolina University Earle Williams (MIT) Nick Guy (Colorado State University) East Carolina University

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  • African Easterly Waves and Atlantic Hurricanes

    Rosana Nieto Ferreira Tom Rickenbach

    East Carolina UniversityEarle Williams (MIT)

    Nick Guy (Colorado State University)

    East Carolina University

  • Connections: African Sahel and North Carolina

    DroughtNiger, West Africa

    Floyd aftermathGreenville, NC

    When West Africa gets more rain, we get more hurricanes!

  • Hurricane Floyd BioHurricane Floyd (1999)• Formed from an African Easterly Wave that left the coast of Africa on September 2

    Hurricane Dennis (1999)

    • Formed from an African Easterly Wave that left the coast of Africa on Aug 17

  • Dennis

  • Dennis

    Floyd AEW

  • Dennis

    Floyd AEW

  • Dennis

    Floyd AEW

  • Floyd AEW

  • Floyd AEW

  • Floyd

  • Floyd

  • Floyd

  • Floyd

  • Floyd

    Gert

  • Floyd

    Gert

  • FloydGert

  • Floyd

    Gert

  • Floyd

    Gert

  • FloydGert

  • Floyd

    Gert

  • Gert

  • Atlantic Tropical Cyclones and African Easterly Waves

    • More than half of all Atlantic tropical cyclones, including Dennis and Floyd, form in African Easterly Waves

    • African Easterly Waves form in the African Sahel.

  • What is an African Easterly Wave?

    Like our own Jet Stream, cyclonic meandering in winds over the African Sahel favors the formation of storms

    AEJRain Rain

  • AEJ

    Formation Mechanisms

    • Reversed meridional temperature gradient between warm Sahara and cool Gulf of Guinea

    • Intertropical convergence zone (ITCZ) convection

    (e.g., Carson 69, Burpee 74, Rennick 77, Mass 77, Reed et al 77, Norquist 77, Thorncroft and Hoskins 94)

    Sahara Desert

    ITCZ Rain

    10 N 20 N 30 NEQ

    600

    200

    Pres

    sure

    (mb)

    Latitude

    ITC

    Z

    Sahara Air Layer

    African Easterly Jet

    African Easterly Jet - AEJ

  • African Easterly Waves1999

    ~20 AEW passed through Niamey

    8 of 12 Atlantic Tropical CyclonesFormed in African Easterly Waves

    including Hurricanes Dennis and Floyd

    1999 700 mb Relative Vorticity – Africa (5N-15N)

    West African Coastline 20W

  • AMMA Field Campaign - Summer 2006

    Goal: Study the connections between Sahel Rainfall and Atlantic Hurricanes

  • 2006 GPCP 1dd Rainfall - Niamey 2006 GPCP 1dd Rainfall - Abuja

    Abuja, Nigeria

    Niamey, Niger

    Two different regimes of rainfall in Equatorial Africa

    At the peak of the rainy season (JAS),

    • It rains every 3-4 days in Niamey.

    • About 12 mm per rainy day

    AEW Regime ITCZ Regime

    2006 Total : 410 mm 2006 Total : 1436 mm

    At the peak of the rainy season (JAS),

    • It rains every day in Abuja.

    • About 12 mm per rainy day

    PresenterPresentation NotesStatistics are for rainfall events stronger than 2.5 mm/day

  • 2006 700 mb Relative Vorticity, Africa (5N-15N)African Easterly Waves2006

    ~21 AEW passed through Niamey

    7 of 8 Atlantic Tropical CyclonesFormed in African Easterly Waves

    including Hurricane Ernesto and Tropical Storm Alberto that affected NC

  • West African ‘Rainmakers’ Organized as squall lines: the largest, rainiest

    systems observed over land

    • African Easterly Waves African Squall Lines

    • Squall lines produce most of the monsoon rain vital to subsistence agriculture in West Africa

  • MIT Radar - Niamey, Niger, West Africa Squall line precursor to Hurricane Helene

    8 September 2006

  • MIT Radar - Niamey, Niger, West Africa Squall line precursor to Hurricane Helene

    8 September 2006

  • MIT Radar - Niamey, Niger, West Africa Squall line precursor to Hurricane Helene

    8 September 2006

  • MIT Radar - Niamey, Niger, West Africa Squall line precursor to Hurricane Helene

    8 September 2006

  • MIT Radar - Niamey, Niger, West Africa Squall line precursor to Hurricane Helene

    8 September 2006

  • MIT Radar - Niamey, Niger, West Africa Squall line precursor to Hurricane Helene

    8 September 2006

  • MIT Radar - Niamey, Niger, West Africa Squall line precursor to Hurricane Helene

    8 September 2006

  • MIT Radar - Niamey, Niger, West Africa Squall line precursor to Hurricane Helene

    8 September 2006

  • MIT Radar - Niamey, Niger, West Africa Squall line precursor to Hurricane Helene

    8 September 2006

  • MIT Radar - Niamey, Niger, West Africa Squall line precursor to Hurricane Helene

    8 September 2006

  • MIT Radar - Niamey, Niger, West Africa Squall line precursor to Hurricane Helene

    8 September 2006

  • MIT Radar - Niamey, Niger, West Africa Squall line precursor to Hurricane Helene

    8 September 2006

  • MIT Radar - Niamey, Niger, West Africa Squall line precursor to Hurricane Helene

    8 September 2006

  • MIT Radar - Niamey, Niger, West Africa Squall line precursor to Hurricane Helene

    8 September 2006

  • MIT Radar - Niamey, Niger, West Africa Squall line precursor to Hurricane Helene

    8 September 2006

  • MIT Radar - Niamey, Niger, West Africa Squall line precursor to Hurricane Helene

    8 September 2006

  • MIT Radar - Niamey, Niger, West Africa Squall line precursor to Hurricane Helene

    8 September 2006

  • MIT Radar - Niamey, Niger, West Africa Squall line precursor to Hurricane Helene

    8 September 2006

  • MIT Radar - Niamey, Niger, West Africa Squall line precursor to Hurricane Helene

    8 September 2006

  • MIT Radar - Niamey, Niger, West Africa Squall line precursor to Hurricane Helene

    8 September 2006

  • MIT Radar - Niamey, Niger, West Africa Squall line precursor to Hurricane Helene

    8 September 2006

  • MIT Radar - Niamey, Niger, West Africa Squall line precursor to Hurricane Helene

    8 September 2006

  • MIT Radar - Niamey, Niger, West Africa Squall line precursor to Hurricane Helene

    8 September 2006

  • MIT Radar - Niamey, Niger, West Africa Squall line precursor to Hurricane Helene

    8 September 2006

  • MIT Radar - Niamey, Niger, West Africa Squall line precursor to Hurricane Helene

    8 September 2006

  • MIT Radar - Niamey, Niger, West Africa Squall line precursor to Hurricane Helene

    8 September 2006

  • MIT Radar - Niamey, Niger, West Africa Squall line precursor to Hurricane Helene

    8 September 2006

  • MIT Radar - Niamey, Niger, West Africa 8 September 2006

    Hurricane Precursors:The Squall Line

    • A total of 28 squall lines

    • Squall lines produced 82% of the 2006 rainfall in Niger

    Squall lines are the largest, rainiest systems observed over the Sahel

    (Rickenbach et al. 2009, GRL)

  • Relation between squall lines and African Easterly WavesTwo Tracks

    (Nieto Ferreira et al. 2009, MWR)

    • 15 squall lines were associated with AEW troughs that propagated along 10-16°N (Northern Track)

    • 13 squall lines were associated with AEW troughs that propagated along 2-6°N (Southern Track) 6°N

    10°N

    700 mb relative vorticity (contours), winds and rainfall (shaded)

    PresenterPresentation Notes700 mb Reanalysis relative vorticity (black contours), GPCP rainfall (shaded) and winds.Black dot marks the radar positionBlue circle marks the position of the AEW trough

  • Structural differences in northern vs. southern track squall lines

    Stratiform Rain Fraction

    Convective Rain Fraction

    Northern 47% 53%Southern 35% 65%

    The rainfall produced by northern track and southern track squall lines is very similar but the mode of delivery of rainfall is very different:

    Hypothesis: AEW troughs present near Niamey in northern track squall lines favor stratiform rain production

  • Conclusion

    There is a direct relationship between Sahel rain and Atlantic hurricanes

    Squall lines are the main rainmakers in the Sahel

    Distinct types of squall line form ahead of AEW troughs along two different AEW tracks

    Understanding the interaction between squall lines and AEWs in the African Sahel may lead to improved

    Atlantic hurricane prediction

  • Sahel Rainfall, African Easterly Waves and Atlantic Tropical Cyclone Activity

    WET WETDRY

    �African Easterly Waves �and Atlantic Hurricanes�Slide Number 2Hurricane Floyd BioSlide Number 4Slide Number 5Slide Number 6Slide Number 7Slide Number 8Slide Number 9Slide Number 10Slide Number 11Slide Number 12Slide Number 13Slide Number 14Slide Number 15Slide Number 16Slide Number 17Slide Number 18Slide Number 19Slide Number 20Slide Number 21Atlantic Tropical Cyclones and African Easterly WavesWhat is an African Easterly Wave? African Easterly Jet - AEJSlide Number 25AMMA �Field Campaign - Summer 2006� Slide Number 27Slide Number 28West African ‘Rainmakers’ Slide Number 30Slide Number 31Slide Number 32Slide Number 33Slide Number 34Slide Number 35Slide Number 36Slide Number 37Slide Number 38Slide Number 39Slide Number 40Slide Number 41Slide Number 42Slide Number 43Slide Number 44Slide Number 45Slide Number 46Slide Number 47Slide Number 48Slide Number 49Slide Number 50Slide Number 51Slide Number 52Slide Number 53Slide Number 54Slide Number 55Slide Number 56Slide Number 57Relation between squall lines and African Easterly Waves�Two Tracks�Structural differences in northern vs. southern track squall linesConclusion Sahel Rainfall, African Easterly Waves and Atlantic Tropical Cyclone Activity