Tropical Cyclones

Journal Article
Tropical Cyclones
Emanuel, K. (2003)
Annual Review of Earth and Planetary Sciences, 31: 75-104

Abstract/Summary:

Tropical cyclones encompass virtually every subdiscipline of geophysical fluid dynamics, including cumulus convection, boundary layers, thermodynamic cycles, surface wave dynamics, upper ocean wind-driven circulations, barotropic instability, Rossby waves, and air-sea interaction. After briefly reviewing what is known about the structure, behavior, and climatology of these fascinating storms, the author provides an overview of their physics, focusing on the unique and poorly understood nature of the air-sea interface, and discusses several of the most interesting avenues of ongoing research.

© 2003 Annual Reviews

Citation:

Emanuel, K. (2003): Tropical Cyclones. Annual Review of Earth and Planetary Sciences, 31: 75-104 (http://arjournals.annualreviews.org/loi/earth)
  • Journal Article
Tropical Cyclones

Emanuel, K.

Abstract/Summary: 

Tropical cyclones encompass virtually every subdiscipline of geophysical fluid dynamics, including cumulus convection, boundary layers, thermodynamic cycles, surface wave dynamics, upper ocean wind-driven circulations, barotropic instability, Rossby waves, and air-sea interaction. After briefly reviewing what is known about the structure, behavior, and climatology of these fascinating storms, the author provides an overview of their physics, focusing on the unique and poorly understood nature of the air-sea interface, and discusses several of the most interesting avenues of ongoing research.

© 2003 Annual Reviews