4.4 Article

On the Squall Lines Preceding Landfalling Tropical Cyclones in China

Journal

MONTHLY WEATHER REVIEW
Volume 140, Issue 2, Pages 445-470

Publisher

AMER METEOROLOGICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1175/MWR-D-10-05080.1

Keywords

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Funding

  1. China National Basic Research Program (China) [2009CB421504]
  2. [NSFC41075031]
  3. [NSFC40921160380]
  4. [NSFC40730948]

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Based on a 3-yr (2007-09) mosaic of radar reflectivity and conventional surface and synoptic radiosonde observations, the general features of squall lines preceding landfalling tropical cyclones (TCs) (pre-TC) in China are examined and compared with their midlatitude and subtropical counterparts. The results show that about 40% of landfalling TCs are associated with pre-TC squall lines with high-occurring frequency in August and from late afternoon to midnight. Most pre-TC squall lines form in a broken-line mode with a trailing-stratiform organization. On average, they occur about 600 km from the TC center in the front-right quadrant with a maximum length of 220 km, a maximum radar reflectivity of 57-62 dBZ, a life span of 4 h, and a moving speed of 12.5 m s(-1). Pre-TC squall lines are generally shorter in lifetime and length than typical midlatitude squall lines. Pre-TC squall lines tend to form in the transition area between the parent TC and subtropical high in a moist environment and with a weaker cold pool than their midlatitude counterparts. The environmental 0-3-km vertical shear is around 10 m s(-1) and generally normal to the orientation of the squall lines. This weak shear makes pre-TC squall lines in a suboptimal condition according to the Rottuno-Klemp-Weisman (RKW) theory. Convection is likely initiated by low-level mesoscale frontogenesis, convergence, and/or confluence instead of synoptic-scale forcing. The parent TC may contribute to (i) the development of convection by enhancing conditional instability and low-level moisture supply, and (ii) the linear organization of discrete convection through the interaction between the TC and the neighboring environmental system.

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