Luthiene Dalanhese

and 5 more

Extratropical cyclones are weather phenomena with significant transfer of energy between the surface (over the ocean or on land) and the atmosphere. Recurrently, reanalysis data are used to understand the behavior of cyclonic tracks and to study extreme events, with constant updates and validations with the observational base in the Northern Hemisphere. However, studies using cyclone tracking in the Southwestern Atlantic, has proven more difficult. This disagreement seems to be in function of the structure and intensity of the forcing factors that influence both cyclogenesis and the displacement to the South Atlantic, when compared to the Northern Hemisphere. In this work, synoptic pressure charts at sea level, manually made and processed by the Brazilian Navy every 12 hours between the years 2010 and 2020, as a product resulting from a consensus among Navy meteorologists, were used to study the cyclonic pathways in the Southwestern Atlantic (METAREA V). Data obtained for all cyclones identified in the charts, based on their position and displacement, formed a database with 10737 cyclones, containing speed, dimensions, and pressure gradient. The cyclones identified have a higher radius frequency between 200/400 km and a faster-moving center shift. In addition, about 60% of cyclones associated with cold fronts have a life cycle ranging from 3 to 4 days. There is also a expressive cyclogenesis between latitudes 23ºS and 43ºS where, in austral autumn winter, increases its frequency over the ocean and close to the southern Brazilian coast. During spring, the greater cyclogenesis frequency occurs over the continent, close to Chaco area in Argentina and Uruguay. The impacts of these statistical figures on the south and southeastern Brazilian coast, mainly the continental insertion point of the cold fronts and cyclonic displacement that influence rough seas and storm surges, are discussed in this work. Keywords: EXTRATROPICAL CYCLONES, CYCLONE TRACK, SYNOPTIC CHARTS, SOUTHWESTERN ATLANTIC