logo
Loading...
Global warming changes tropical cyclone translation speed

Earth Sciences

Global warming changes tropical cyclone translation speed

M. Yamaguchi, J. C. Chan, et al.

This research, conducted by Munehiko Yamaguchi, Johnny C.L. Chan, Il-Ju Moon, Kohei Yoshida, and Ryo Mizuta, challenges previous beliefs regarding tropical cyclone translation speed under global warming. It reveals that while historical data shows no slowdown, future simulations predict a shift that could enhance cyclones' speeds in certain areas, contradicting expected patterns.... show more
Abstract
Slow-moving tropical cyclones (TCs) can cause heavy rain because of their duration of influence. Combined with expected increase in rain rates associated with TCs in a warmer climate, there is growing interest in TC translation speed in the past and future. Here we present that a slowdown trend of the translation speed is not simulated for the period 1951–2011 based on historical model simulations. We also find that the annual-mean translation speed could increase under global warming. Although previous studies show large uncertainties in the future projections of TC characteristics, our model simulations show that the average TC translation speed at higher latitudes becomes smaller in a warmer climate, but the relative frequency of TCs at higher latitudes increases. Since the translation speed is much larger in the extratropics, the increase in the relative frequency of TCs at higher latitudes compensates the reduction of the translation speed there, leading to a global mean increase in TC translation speed.
Publisher
Nature Communications
Published On
Jan 08, 2020
Authors
Munehiko Yamaguchi, Johnny C.L. Chan, Il-Ju Moon, Kohei Yoshida, Ryo Mizuta
Tags
global warming
tropical cyclones
translation speed
climate models
future simulations
poleward shift
Listen, Learn & Level Up
Over 10,000 hours of research content in 25+ fields, available in 12+ languages.
No more digging through PDFs, just hit play and absorb the world's latest research in your language, on your time.
listen to research audio papers with researchbunny