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Faster recovery of North Atlantic tropical cyclone-induced cold wakes in recent decades
Climate change | Nature and the biosphere
Published: 19 May 2025
Date (DD-MM-YYYY)
02-06-2025 to 02-06-2026
Available on-demand until 2nd June 2026
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Free
Education type
Article
CPD subtype
On-demand
Description
Intense winds associated with tropical cyclones (TCs) generate surface ocean cooling in their wakes, which can persist for several weeks in their aftermath. While multi-decadal observations of the sea surface have shown a substantial warming of the ocean, long-term changes in cold wake recovery time remain largely unknown. Here we find a trend toward faster recovery of TC cold wakes in the Atlantic main development region (MDR) since 2001. This is due primarily to a decrease in the strength of the North Atlantic trade winds, which reduces evaporative cooling of the ocean. The faster damping of TC cold wakes has led to a significant increase in the intensification of subsequent TCs that encounter lingering wakes from prior TCs, with a magnitude that is about 9% of that from long-term warming of the ocean. Finally, earth system model simulations indicate that the observed decrease in the cold wake recovery time will likely continue into the future.
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