Cross section of the core of a mature hurricane. The
axisymmetric primary swirling motion (curved black arrows) of
the vortex is sustained by a radial and vertical secondary
circulation (red arrows) that consists of frictional inflow that
loses angular momentum to the sea as it gains moist enthalpy and a
convective updraft around the eye that turns the latent heat
into sensible heat to provide the buoyancy needed to loft air
from the surface to tropopause level. The updraft entrains
midlevel air promoting mass and angular momentum convergence
(blue arrow). It is this inflow that supplies the excess
angular momentum needed to spin up the vortex. Precipitation
driven convective updrafts (vertical black arrow) form as
hydrometeors fall from the outward sloping updraft.
Condensation in the anvil causes a mesoscale updraft above the
0°C isotherm and precipitation loading by snow falling
from the overhanging anvil causes a mesoscale downdraft below
0°C isotherm (yellow arrows). The melting level itself is
marked by the radar brightband (green) and maximum mass
convergence. Inside the eye, thermally driven descent warms and
dries the tropospheric column, leading to substantial pressure
fall there.
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