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Mid-Latitude Cyclones and Fronts Lecture 8 October 28, 2009 Review from last week • If we apply some perturbation to a system, how will that system be affected? – Stable: System returns to original state – Unstable: System continues to move away from original state – Neutral: System remains steady after perturbed • Dry Adiabatic Lapse Rate – Air parcel must be unsaturated – Rate of adiabatic heating or cooling = ~10°C / 1 km • Moist Adiabatic Lapse Rate – Air parcel is saturated – Rate of adiabatic heating or cooling = 6.5°C per 1km Absolute Stability • The atmosphere is absolutely stable when the environmental lapse rate (ELR) is less than the MALR ELR < MALR <DALR – A saturated OR unsaturated parcel will be cooler than the surrounding environment and will sink, if raised – Inversion layers are always stable Absolute Instability • The atmosphere is absolutely unstable when the ELR is greater than the DALR ELR > DALR > MALR – An unsaturated OR saturated parcel will always be warmer than the surrounding environment and will continue to ascend, if raised Conditional Instability • The atmosphere is conditionally unstable when the ELR is greater than the MALR but less than the DALR MALR < ELR < DALR – An unsaturated parcel will be cooler and will sink, if raised – A saturated parcel will be warmer and will continue to ascend, if raised Rising Air • Consider an air parcel rising through the atmosphere – The parcel expands as it rises – The expansion, or work done on the parcel causes the temperature to decrease • As the parcel rises, humidity increases and reaches 100%, leading to the formation of cloud droplets by condensation Rising Air • If the cloud is sufficiently deep or long lived, precipitation develops. • The upward motions generating clouds and precipitation can be produced by: – Convection in unstable air – Convergence of air near a cloud base – Lifting of air by fronts – Lifting over elevated topography Lifting by Convection • As the earth is heated by the sun, thermals (bubbles of hot air) rise upward from the surface • The thermal cools as it rises, losing some of its buoyancy (its ability to rise) • The vertical extent of the cloud is largely determined by the stability of the environment Lifting by Convection • A deep stable layer restricts continued vertical growth • A deep unstable layer will likely lead to development of rainproducing clouds • These clouds are more vertically developed than clouds developed by convergence lifting Lifting by Convergence • Convergence exists when there is a horizontal net inflow into a region • When air converges along the surface, it is forced to rise Lifting by Convergence • Large scale convergence can lift air hundreds of kilometers across • Vertical motions associated with convergence are generally much weaker than ones due to convection • Generally, clouds developed by convergence are less vertically developed Lifting due to Topography • This type of lifting occurs when air is confronted by a sudden increase in the vertical topography of the Earth – When air comes across a mountain, it is lifted up and over, cooling as it is rising • The type of cloud formed is dependent upon the moisture content and stability of the air Lifting due to Topography Lifting Along Frontal Boundaries • Will discuss origin more in detail today and as we begin to discuss cyclones and fronts Moving on to mid-latitude cyclones and fronts… Background on Cyclones •A cyclone is: An area of low pressure around which the winds flow counter-clockwise in the northern hemisphere, and clockwise in the southern hemisphere • Hurricane (tropical cyclone) • Mid-latitude cyclone • Today, we’ll focus on midlatitude, or extra-tropical cyclones, which have a life cycle and frontal structures. Hurricanes, which we’ll talk about later, have no fronts. http://www.wunderground.com/hurricane/history/iop4_sat.jpg Background on Cyclones Midlatitude cyclones are crucial in maintaining a temperature equilibrium on our planet. This is because in the northern hemisphere . . . • . . . They advect warm air northward • . . . And they advect cold air southward • This helps maintain the radiative equilibrium on our planet! Background on Cyclones • We already know that friction near the surface causes convergence into a low pressure center and that flow is counterclockwise around the low in the N. Hemisphere. • So we end up with the cold air moving south and east and the warm air moving north and west • Likewise, lifting by convergence forces parcels upward so we get clouds and precipitation in the vicinity of the low pressure L Background on Cyclones . . . The figure to the right represents a typical midlatitude cyclone: • Cold, dry air is advected eastward behind the cold front • Warm, moist air is advected north behind the warm front • The fronts move in the direction the “teeth” point Background on Fronts • Definition - boundary, transition zone between two different air masses • The two air masses have different densities. Frequently, they are characterized by different temperatures and moisture contents • Front has horizontal and vertical extent • Frontal boundary/zone can be 1-100 km wide • Types of synoptic-scale fronts: – – – – stationary fronts cold fronts warm fronts occluded fronts Warm Front • A transition zone where a warm air mass replaces a cold air mass • Drawn as a red line with red semi-circles pointing in the direction of the front’s movement Warm Front • Again, warm air is less dense than cold air. • As the warm air moves north, it slides up the gently sloping warm front. • Because warm fronts have a less steep slope than cold fronts, the precipitation associated with warm fronts is more “stratiform” (less convective), but generally covers a greater area. Common Characteristics Associated with Warm Fronts Before Passing While Passing After Passing Winds South-southeast Variable South-southwest Temperature Cool-cold, slowly warming Steady rise Warmer, then steady Pressure Usually falling Leveling off Slight rise, followed by fall Clouds Cirrus, Cirrostratus, Nimbostratus Stratus-type Clearing with scattered Stratocumulus Precipitation Light to moderate rain, snow, sleet or drizzle Drizzle or none Usually none, sometimes light rain in showers Visibility Poor Poor, but improving Fair in haze Dew Point Steady rise Steady Rise, then steady Cold Fronts • A transition zone where a cold air mass replaces a warm air mass • Drawn as a blue line with blue triangles pointing in the direction of the front’s movement Cold Fronts •Cold air is more dense than warm air. • As the dense, cold air moves into the warm air region, it forces the warm air to rapidly rise just ahead of the cold front. • This results in deeper clouds and precipitation than we saw with a warm front. The clouds that form can be convective and can be associated with more intense precipitation and thunderstorms • Often, the precipitation along a cold front is a very narrow line of thunderstorms Common Characteristics Associated with Cold Fronts Before Passing While Passing After Passing Winds South-southwest Gusty; shifting West-northwest Temperature Warm Sudden drop Steadily dropping Pressure Falling steadily Minimum, then sharp rise Rising steadily Clouds Increasing: Cirrus, Cirrostratus, Cumulonimbus Cumulonimbus Cumulus Precipitation Short periods of showers Heavy rains, sometimes with hail, thunder, lightning Showers, then clearing Visibility Fair to poor in haze Poor, followed by improving Good, except in showers Dew Point High; remains steady lowering Sharp drop Occluded Fronts • A region where a faster moving cold front has caught up to a slower moving warm front. • Generally occurs near the end of the life of a cyclone • Drawn with a purple line with alternating semicircles and triangles Cold Occlusion (The type most associated with mid-latitude cyclones) • Cold front "lifts" the warm front up and over the very cold air • Associated weather is similar to a warm front as the occluded front approaches • Once the front has passed, the associated weather is similar to a cold front • Vertical structure is often difficult to observe http://apollo.lsc.vsc.edu/classes/met130/ notes/chapter11/index.html Warm Occlusion • Cold air behind cold front is not dense enough to lift cold air ahead of warm front • Cold front rides up and over the warm front • Upper-level cold front reached station before surface warm occlusion http://apollo.lsc.vsc.edu/classes/met130/not es/chapter11/index.html Stationary Front • Front is stalled • No movement of the temperature gradient • But, there is still convergence of winds, and forcing for ascent (and often precipitation) in the vicinity of a stationary front. • Drawn as alternating segments of red semicircles and blue triangles, pointing in opposite directions How to Locate a Cyclone 1. Find the region of lowest sea level pressure 2. Find the center of the cyclonic (counterclockwise) circulation How to Locate a Cyclone 1. Find the region of lowest sea level pressure L 2. Find the center of the cyclonic (counterclockwise) circulation How to Locate a Front We know that we need to look for low pressure and a boundary of cold and warm air. To pinpoint the parts of our cyclone, look for specifics in the observation maps • Find the center of cyclonic rotation • Find the large temperature gradients • Identify regions of wind shifts • Identify the type of temperature advection • Look for kinks in the isobars Polar Front Theory - Development and Evolution of a Wave Cyclone Also, referred to as Norwegian Cyclone Model (NCM) • The wave cyclone (often called a frontal wave) develops along the polar front • When a large temperature gradient exists across the polar front - the atmosphere contains a large amount of Available Potential Energy (Remember the greater the temperature difference on the Skew-T corresponded to a large Convective Available Potential Energy) NCM cont. • Northward moving warm air and southward moving cold air are forced around each other, forming a bend in the temperature gradient (b). This forms the warm front and the cold front. Now with a counter-clockwise spin, winds converge at the newly formed low pressure minimum at the center of rotation. NCM cont. • (c)- A fully-developed "wave cyclone" is seen 12-24 hours from its inception. It consists of: – a warm front moving to the northeast – a cold front moving to the southeast – region between warm and cold fronts is the "warm sector" – central low pressure (low, which is deepening with time) – wide-spread precip. ahead of the warm front – narrow band of precip. along the cold front – Wind speeds continue to get stronger as the low deepens – The production of clouds and precip. also generates energy for the storm as Latent Heat is released http://apollo.lsc.vsc.edu/classes/met130/notes/chapte r12/index.html NCM cont. (d) - As the cold front moves swiftly eastward, the systems starts to occlude. – Storm is most intense at this stage – have an occluded front trailing out from the surface low – triple point/occlusion - is where the cold, warm, and occluded fronts all intersect http://apollo.lsc.vsc.edu/classes/met130/no tes/chapter12/index.html Final Stage (e) - the warm sector diminishes in size as the systems further occludes. – The storm has used most all of its energy and dissipates – cloud/precip production has diminished – The warm sector air has been lifted upward – The cold air is at the surface stable situation. • The temperature contrast which drove this whole situation from the surface perspective is no longer near the center of the wave of low pressure http://apollo.lsc.vsc.edu/classes/met130/not es/chapter12/index.html Another view Weather associated with a typical late fall to early spring mid-latitude cyclone Figure courtesy of Jon Martin Precipitation Around a Cyclone and its Fronts To the right is a major cyclone that affected the central U.S. on November 10, 1998. Around the cold front, the precipitation is more intense, but there is less areal coverage. North of the warm front, the precipitation distribution is more “stratiform”: Widespread and less intense. http://weather.unisys.com Precipitation Around a Cyclone and its Fronts Again, in this radar and surface pressure distribution from December 1, 2006, the precipitation along the cold front is much more compact and stronger. North of the warm front, the precipitation is much more stratiform. Also note the kink in the isobars along the cold front! Coming next week… • We have all seen cyclones on weather maps, but how do we know if it will strengthen or weaken? The key to cyclone development is in the upper level flow