scholarly journals Migratory Tropical Cyclones in the South China Sea Modulated by Intraseasonal Oscillations and Climatological Circulations

2019 ◽  
Vol 32 (19) ◽  
pp. 6445-6466
Author(s):  
Jau-Ming Chen ◽  
Ching-Hsuan Wu ◽  
Jianyun Gao ◽  
Pei-Hsuan Chung ◽  
Chung-Hsiung Sui

Abstract This study focuses on the migratory tropical cyclones (TCs) that form in the western North Pacific (WNP) and move into the South China Sea (SCS). Their movements are found to be modulated differently by intraseasonal oscillations (ISOs) and climatological circulations through the TC-active months. The modulating processes of climatological circulations vary from a westward intensifying western Pacific subtropical high (WPSH) in July and August to a southeastward extending monsoon trough (MT) in September, and a strengthening equatorial trough (ET) in October and November. In July and August, enhanced tropical ISO convections in the SCS are accompanied by a 30–60-day anomalous anticyclone to the northeast of the SCS. The migratory TCs move along the southern peripheries of this anomalous anticyclone and the WPSH into the SCS. In September, enhanced ISO convections in the SCS coincide with a meridional 30–60-day circulation pair with an anomalous anticyclone to the north of 20°N and an anomalous cyclone to the south. TCs move in between this meridional 30–60-day circulation pair and the northern periphery of the MT toward the SCS. In October and November, enhanced ISO convections in the SCS and WNP coexist with an overlying 30–60-day anomalous cyclone and an intensified ET. The migratory TCs move along the northern sections of this 30–60-day anomalous cyclone and the ET toward the SCS. With a different track, TCs recurving northward from the tropical WNP into the region east of Taiwan are modulated by completely different variability features of the 30–60-day ISO and climatological circulations.

2020 ◽  
Vol 8 ◽  
Author(s):  
Zheng Ling ◽  
Yuqing Wang ◽  
Guihua Wang ◽  
Hailun He

In addition to tropical cyclones (TCs) locally formed in the South China Sea (SCS), there are also TCs that initially form over the Northwest Pacific (NWP) and move westward to enter the SCS (often called nonlocal TCs). It is unclear how those nonlocal TCs are modulated by the intraseasonal climate variability. In this study, the impacts of two types of intraseasonal oscillations, namely the Madden–Julian Oscillation (MJO) and the quasi-biweekly oscillation (QBWO), on nonlocally formed TCs over the SCS in summer (May–September) are analyzed based on best-track TC data and global reanalysis during 1979–2018. Results show that in the convective phases of both MJO and QBWO, the western Pacific subtropical high shifted more eastward, and more TCs entered the SCS. This is mainly because more TCs formed in the NWP in the convective phases of intraseasonal oscillations and the genesis locations of the NWP TCs shifted westward and closer to the SCS. In addition to TC count, intraseasonal oscillations also affected the intensity of nonlocal TCs entered the SCS, with the influence of QBWO being more significant than MJO. In the convectively active phases of QBWO (phases 2–5), 34 nonlocal TCs reached typhoon intensity, while only two nonlocal TCs reached typhoon intensity in the convectively inactive phases (phases 1, 6, 7, 8). Further analysis indicates that nonlocal TCs often moved with the northwestward propagating convective signals of QBWO, resulting in more and stronger TCs that entered the SCS in the convective phases of QBWO. The mean location that the nonlocal TC entered the SCS also shifted northward with the northward propagation of intraseasonal oscillations.


2016 ◽  
Vol 29 (2) ◽  
pp. 855-868 ◽  
Author(s):  
Zheng Ling ◽  
Yuqing Wang ◽  
Guihua Wang

Abstract The South China Sea (SCS) is affected by two intraseasonal components in summer: the Madden–Julian oscillation (MJO) and the quasi-biweekly oscillation (QBWO). In the present study, the impacts of the MJO and QBWO on tropical cyclones (TCs) locally formed in the SCS (local TCs) in summer are investigated. The results show that both the MJO and QBWO can affect the genesis frequency, location, and motion of the local TCs. More TCs form in the convectively active phases of the MJO and QBWO in the northern SCS. With the northward propagation of the MJO and QBWO convective signals, the major TC genesis location also shifts northward. Since the western Pacific subtropical high shifts eastward (westward) when convection associated with the MJO and QBWO in the northern SCS is enhanced (suppressed), the steering flow in the major TC genesis region is favorable for the eastward (westward) movement of TCs. Results from the composite analysis of the steering flow indicate that both the MJO and QBWO play an important role in controlling the motion of the eastward-moving TCs.


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