Atmosphere (Feb 2021)

Large Roll Vortices Exhibited by Post-Tropical Cyclone Sandy during Landfall

  • James A. Schiavone,
  • Kun Gao,
  • David A. Robinson,
  • Peter J. Johnsen,
  • Mathieu R. Gerbush

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/atmos12020259
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12, no. 2
p. 259

Abstract

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Roll vortices are frequent features of a hurricane’s boundary layer, with kilometer or sub-kilometer horizontal scale. In this study, we found that large roll vortices with O (10 km) horizontal wavelength occurred over land in Post-Tropical Cyclone Sandy (2012) during landfall on New Jersey. Various characteristics of roll vortices were corroborated by analyses of Doppler radar observations, a 500 m resolution Weather Research and Forecasting (WRF) simulation, and an idealized roll vortex model. The roll vortices were always linear-shaped, and their wavelengths of 5–14 km were generally larger than any previously published for a tropical cyclone over land. Based on surface wind observations and simulated WRF surface wind fields, we found that roll vortices significantly increased the probability of hazardous winds and likely caused the observed patchiness of treefall during Sandy’s landfall.

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