Nature Communications (Mar 2024)

The North Equatorial Current and rapid intensification of super typhoons

  • Sok Kuh Kang,
  • Sung-Hun Kim,
  • I.-I. Lin,
  • Young-Hyang Park,
  • Yumi Choi,
  • Isaac Ginis,
  • Joseph Cione,
  • Ji Yun Shin,
  • Eun Jin Kim,
  • Kyeong Ok Kim,
  • Hyoun Woo Kang,
  • Jae-Hyoung Park,
  • Jean-Raymond Bidlot,
  • Brian Ward

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-024-45685-2
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 15, no. 1
pp. 1 – 11

Abstract

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Abstract Super Typhoon Mangkhut, which traversed the North Equatorial Current (NEC; 8–17 °N) in the western North Pacific in 2018, was the most intense Category-5 tropical cyclone (TC) with the longest duration in history—3.5 days. Here we show that the combination of two factors—high ocean heat content (OHC) and increased stratification — makes the NEC region the most favored area for a rapid intensification (RI) of super typhoons, instead of the Eddy Rich Zone (17–25 °N), which was considered the most relevant for RI occurrence. The high OHC results from a northward deepening thermocline in geostrophic balance with the westward-flowing NEC. The stratification is derived from precipitation associated with the Inter-Tropical Convergence Zone in the summer peak typhoon season. These factors, which are increasingly significant over the past four decades, impede the TC-induced sea surface cooling, thus enhancing RI of TCs and simultaneously maintaining super typhoons over the NEC region.