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Dynamic Ocean–Atmosphere Processes of Typhoon Chan-Hom and Their Impact on Intensity, Rainfall and SST Cooling

Guiting SongGuangdong Provincial Key Laboratory of Marine Resources and Coastal Engineering, School of Marine Sciences, Sun Yat-sen University, Guangzhou 510275, ChinaM. V. SubrahmanyamScience and Technology, Hainan Tropical Ocean University, Sanya 572022, ChinaChen WangHPC and Data Science Department, National Institute of Water and Atmospheric Research, Wellington 6021, New ZealandXiaoqing LiaoSchool of Marine Science, Sun Yat-sen University and Southern Marine Science and Engineering Guangdong Laboratory (ZHuhai), Zhuhai 519082, ChinaYanmei LiDepartment of Mine, Metallurgy and Geology Engineering, University of Guanajuato, Guanajuato 36020, MexicoShahriyor NurulloyevCentral Asian University of Environmental and Climate Change Studies, Green University, 2, Darkha, Tashkent District, Tashkent Region, Chimkent 111104, Uzbekistan
Atmospherejournal2026en
ABI

Abstract

This study aims to investigate the effects of Chan-Hom (2015) typhoon-induced variations in enthalpy flux (EF) and moisture flux (MF) on intensity variations and rainfall. Chan-Hom (2015) made landfall at Zhoushan, then changed its direction and moved towards Korea. This analysis used ERA5 reanalyzed data, encompassing daily surface latent and sensible heat flux, along with wind measurements at a height of 10 m. Furthermore, wind components and specific humidity data from the 1000–200 hPa level in ERA5 were utilized to compute the MF and MF convergence, in accordance with the equations outlined in the methodology. This study examines the correlation among typhoon intensity, precipitation, MF, and EF. The mechanism by which Typhoon Chan-Hom has caused a decline in sea surface temperature (SST) was analyzed. Typhoons need a higher EF that can affect them before landfall to maintain their intensity. The highest LHF was observed (340 W/m2) prior to typhoon landfall, indicating that LHF responds to intensity-induced wind during Chan-Hom. Typhoon-induced rainfall is mainly controlled by the MF convergence, rather than the typhoon intensity. The spatial and temporal distributions of MF and MF convergence (MFC) during typhoon formation to landfall reveal that the symmetric MFC is dominated by typhoon intensity; a symmetrical structure is observed when the intensity is high. MFC includes wind convergence and moisture advection. Wind convergence dominates the MFC during typhoons, but moisture advection forms at the eyewall. MF during the typhoon’s landfall can relate to the amount of rainfall that occurred over the land. However, the rainfall pattern changed after landfall, and the typhoon changed its direction. SST cooling observed in the study area is mainly due to the upwelling process with strong cyclonic winds.

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