Mediterranean Tropical-Like Cyclones (MTLCs), commonly referred to as Medicanes, are tropical-like storms increasingly affecting the Mediterranean basin. Their dynamics result from the interaction of convection, boundary-layer processes, and mesoscale circulation, leading to a multiscale organization that is still only partially understood. This study examines the internal structure of Medicane Ianos by combining a 1 km Weather Research and Forecasting (WRF) simulation with two complementary data-driven approaches: Proper Orthogonal Decomposition (POD) for the spatial organization of the flow, and Empirical Mode Decomposition with Hilbert Spectral Analysis (EMD-HSA) for its temporal scaling properties. The POD results reveal a vertically stratified system dominated near the surface by boundary-layer forcing, with energy concentrated in a small number of coherent modes. Higher in the troposphere, the flow becomes more uniform and isotropic, while small-scale features persist as embedded structures shaped by the evolving circulation. Temporal fluctuations inside the eyewall display clear changes with height: temperature variability shows strong persistence in the lower troposphere, while correlations weaken progressively at higher levels, a pattern confirmed by the vertical distribution of Hurst exponents. Overall, the analysis depicts Ianos as a layered multiscale system and demonstrates how data-driven decomposition can effectively complement dynamical modeling in the study of MTLCs. • Ianos displays a vertically stratified structure, with planetary boundary layer forcing dominating the lowest levels and a transition toward more uniform flow in the free troposphere. • Energy distribution across scales reveals that large vortical structures govern the system, while smaller features persist as embedded patterns shaped by the evolving circulation. • Temporal fluctuations inside the eyewall show stronger persistence near the surface and a gradual weakening aloft, revealing a layered nature of the cyclone’s internal variability.
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Christian N. Gencarelli
Institute of Environmental Geology and Geoengineering
Leonardo Primavera
UNESCO
Giuseppe Ciardullo
UNESCO
Dynamics of Atmospheres and Oceans
University of Calabria
Institute of Atmospheric Pollution Research
Institute of Environmental Geology and Geoengineering
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Gencarelli et al. (Wed,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/69c770418bbfbc51511e07a6 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.dynatmoce.2026.101668