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ExamReview3 Midla/tudinalCyclonesandCyclone Development Commashapeindica/onstormis s/llintensifying LifeCycleofa Developing Midla/tudinal Storm: PolarFront Theory(the“Norwegian” model) Stage1: Sta/onary Front LifeCycleofa Developing Midla/tudinal Storm: Stage2: FrontalWave Kinkformsonthefront causedbyupperlevelshort wave, Coldairbeginstomove south-ward,warmairnorth -ward, Precipita/onstartstoforms LifeCycleofa Developing Midla/tudinal Storm: Stage3: OpenWave Lowpressureis deepening (pressureatcenteris becominglower) LifeCycleofa Developing Midla/tudinal Storm: Stage4 Mature(ini/al occlusion) Energysource:Risingwarmairand sinkingcoldairaswellascondensa/on releaseenergyforthestorm, systemismostintense LifeCycleofa Developing Midla/tudinal Storm: Stage5 AdvancedOcculsion Coldfrontovertakesthewarmfront, occlusionforms,warmsectoris removedfromcenterofthelow, takingawayrisingwarmairasan energysource Startsweakening,dyingoff Fig.10.1,p.271 TriplePoint: mightleadto forma/onof newlow. LifeCycleofa Developing Midla/tudinal Storm: Stage6: Cutofflow lifecyclelastsfroma fewdaystooveraweek. Iden/fythestageofeachmidla/tudecyclone Namesandareasofforma/onforwinter /mecyclones Lee-sidelows:Mountainrangescausethe westerlywindtocurvecyclonically Typicaltracks: eastwardornortheastward Nor’easters:warmth andmoistureofthe gulfstreamtriggers storm Prevailingwesterliessteerthecyclones Fig. 8.2, p. 210 Cyclogenesis:dependentonupper atmosphere’sJetStream(~10kmup) Ridge Trough Whystormstendtoonlyhappeninwintermonths? Posi/onandstrengthofJetStream Summer:jetisfarnorth,cyclonesmostly impactCanada Winter:jetstreamgetsstronger andmovesfurthersouth, enhancedimpactonU.S. UpperLevelLongandShortWaves Blackcontours:heightisolinesofthe500hPapressurelevel Redcontours:isotherms(linesofconstanttemperature) • Upper-levellongwaves(typically4-5)moveslowlyfromwesttoeast • Upperlevel“shortwaves”moverela/velyquicklyfromwesttoeast. • Shortwavesareassociatedwith“coldairadvec/on”(bluearrows) and“warmairadvec/on”(redarrows),thisamplifieswave. ConvergenceandDivergence Divergentmo/onmoredominant thansurfaceconvergence:leads tofallingsurfacepressure Upward mo/on Convergenceatthesurface Forastormtointensify,theupperleveltroughoflowpressuremust belocatedtothewest(lec)ofthesurfacelow SIDEVIEW FlowSlows FlowSpeeds Backup Pudngitalltogether tothewestof surfacelow Fig. 10.11, p. 282 OpenWave:GrowingStage Occlusion:Dissipa/ngStage Aslongasmoreairleavesthe ver/calcolumnthanentersfrom below,thesurfacelowwill deepen.Upper-levellowlies westofsurfacelow. Oncetheupper-levellowliesabove thesurfacelowmoreairentersthe ver/calcolumnbelowthanleaves intheupperlevels,thelow“fills” andpressureincreases. Fig. 10.9, p. 278 CloudsandStability AbsolutelyStable The atmosphere is absolutely stable (absolument stable) when the air at the surface is either cooler than the air aloft (an inversion), or the temperature difference between the warmer surface air and the air aloft is not very great, (i.e., the environmental lapse rate is less than the moist adiabatic rate). AbsolutelyUnstable The atmosphere is absolutely unstable (absolument instable) when the surface air is much warmer than the air aloft, I.e., the environmental lapse rate is greater than the dry adiabatic rate (i.e., the environmental lapse rate is greater than the dry adiabatic rate). Condi/onallyUnstable The atmosphere is conditionally unstable (conditionnellement instable) when unsaturated air can be lifted to a point where condensation occurs and the rising air becomes warmer than the air around it. This takes lace when the environmental lapse rate lies between the moist adiabatic rate and the dry adiabatic rate. KeyTerms • EnvironmentalLapseRate:Therateatwhichthe temperatureintheenvironmentchanges.Isdeterminedby measurement • DryAdiaba/cLapseRate:rateatwhichthetemperatureof unsaturatedairchangeswithheight:10oC/km • MoistAdiaba/cLapseRate:rateatwhichthetemperature ofsaturatedairchangeswithheight(dependenton temperature):Canuseaveragerateof6oC/km • DewPointLapseRate:Rateatwhichdewpointchanges withheightinunsaturatedair:2oC/km – InsaturatedairdewpointchangesatMoistAdiaba/cRate CausesofInstability • Anythingthatsteepenstheenvironmental lapserate(makestemperaturechangegreater withheight) – Coolingairalo4 • coldairadvec/on(windsbringincoldair) • radia/onalcooling(cloudsemidngradia/ontospace) – Warmingairatthesurface • day/mesolarhea/ng • warmairadvec/on • airmovingoverwarmsurface CloudDevelopment • • • Cloudsdevelopasanairparcelrisesandcoolstothedewpointtemperature. Usuallyatriggerorprocessisneededtoini/atetheriseofanairparcel Convec/on – Differen/allandsurfacehea/ngcreatesareasofhighsurfacetemperature – Airabovewarmlandsurfaceheats,forminga‘bubble’ofwarmairthatrises (convec/on) – Cloudbaseformsatlevel of free convection CloudDevelopment PossibleTriggers Rising Air (air ascendant) Temperature drops at moist adiabatic lapse rate (~6°C/km) Dew point temperature drops at moist adiabatic lapse rate (~6°C/km) Saturated Unsaturated Temperature drops at dry adiabatic lapse rate (~10°C/km) Dew point temperature drops at 2°C/km Subsiding Air (l'air diminuant) Temperature rises at moist adiabatic lapse rate (~6°C/km) Dew point temperature rises at moist adiabatic lapse rate (~6°C/km) Saturated Unsaturated Temperature rises at dry adiabatic lapse rate (~10°C/km) Dew point temperature rises at 2°C/km Red:DryAdiaba/cLapseRate Blue:MoistAdiaba/cLapseRate Grey:DewPointLapseRate Notehowthelapserates comeintoplay Lake-EffectSnowstorms:Mechanism Idealcondi/ons: • Unfrozenlake • Airtemperatureatleast13°Ccolderthanwatertemperature • Distanceacrossthelakeatleast100+km Thunderstorms Thunderstorms develop in Absolutely Unstable or Conditionally Unstable Conditions Airmass Thunderstorm: Mature Stage Airmass Thunderstorm: Beginning Cumulus Stage (Growth Stage) Fig.11.2,p.299 Airmass Thunderstorm: Dissipating Stage • After thunderstorm enters mature stage it begins to dissipate after 15-30 minutes • Downdracsdominate,cudngoff thestorm’sfuelsupply(rising warmhumidair) • Allthreestagesmightbeoverin lessthan1hour • Lower-levelcloudsquickly evaporate Third(Dissipa/ng)Stage ThunderstormCategories: MulLcellThunderstorms ShouldbeabletoIden/fythepartsofathunderstorm MulLcellThunderstorms – Contain a number of convection cells, each in a different stage of development – Moderate to strong vertical wind shear is present – Tilt: updrafts rides up and over the downdrafts – Overshooting top possible (intrusion into stratosphere) – The longer the storm persists, the more severe – Cold downdrafts under the storm reach the surface, leading to sharp temperature drops – Leads to gust front and downbursts & microbursts CharacterisLcsofaMulLcellThunderstorm Updrafts and downdrafts are tilted, supplying additional energy. MulLcellThunderstorms Gust Front – leading edge of the cold outflowing air (like a mini cold front) – around 1000 feet deep with average speeds of 10-30 mph, wind gusts (called straight line winds) around 60 mph – May form shelf cloud (if atmosphere is very stable at the ground) and roll cloud (spinning around horizontal axis) – Many gust fronts can merge into an ‘outflow boundary' Microbursts – localized downburst (less than 2.5 miles wide) that hits the ground and spreads horizontally in a radial burst of wind – Winds as high as 150 mph, severe damage possible ExampleofaRollCloud formingbehindagustfront Outflow Boundary from Multicell Storm System Radarimageofa oujlowboundary, ocentriggeringnew thunderstorms ThunderstormCategories: Squall-LineThunderstorms – Line of multicell Fig.11.13,p.306 thunderstorms with strong gusty winds directly along or ahead of a cold front Radarimageofaprefrontalsquallline fromIndianato Arkansas(red:most intense) Causes severe weather over much of the length of the squall line Mostcommon:Pre-frontalsquallline thunderstormsaheadofcoldfront Triggered by upper-air gravity waves that originate at the cold front Squall-LineThunderstorms Squall-line thunderstorm with a trailing stratiform cloud layer and tilted updrafts: • tilt promotes development of new cells as storm system moves • rear inflow jet may exceed 100 mph Fig.11.15,p.307 ThunderstormCategories: MesoscaleConvecLveComplexes(MCCs) of individual multicell – During the summer a number thunderstorms may occasionally grow in size and organize into a large circular convective weather system – Can be 1000 times larger than an air mass thunderstorm – Can cover entire states, an area bigger than 100,000 km – Move slowly (< 20 mph) and last for over 12 hours – Provide significant portions of the growing season rainfall in 2 the Central U.S., reach their max intensity at night – Fueled by moist low-level jet from the south (brings moisture) – Severe weather threat: hail, high winds, flash floods & tornadoes Fig.11.20,p.310 Satellite image showing the cold cloud tops (dark red) of an MCC in Kansas Radar image of an MCC moving SSEward into Kentucky. Red: strong thunderstorm activity Fig.11.21,p.311 WhatMakesaThunderstormSevere? A thunderstorm is considered “severe” if it contains one of the following: • Hailwithadiameterofthree-quarterinchorgreater • Winddamageorgustsof50knots(58mph)orgreater • Atornado SupercellThunderstorm: A large, long-lasting thunderstorm with a single rotating updraft Key Difference is Supercells have Rotation Fig.11.23,p.313 Lightening • DevelopmentofLightening • HowtoProtectyourselffromLightening • TypesofLightening Developmentofa lightningstroke Stage1: Whenthenega/vechargenearthe bomomofthecloudbecomeslarge enoughtoovercometheair’s resistance,aflowofelectrons—the steppedleader—rushestoward theearth Developmentofa lightningstroke Stage2: Astheelectronsapproachthe ground,aregionofposi/vecharge movesupintotheairthroughany conduc/ngobject,suchastrees, buildings,andevenhumans(a streamer). Developmentofa lightningstroke Stage3: Whenthedownwardflowof electrons(steppedleader)meetsthe upwardsurgeofposi/vecharge (streamer),astrongelectriccurrent —abrightreturnstroke—carries posi/vechargeupwardintothe cloud(travelsat60,000mph). Thefirstlightningstrikeisocen repeatedbysubsequentdartleaders inthesameionizedchannel(upto 30/mes,flickers). Various Forms of Lightning Fig.11.37,p.324 Groundtocloudlighteningcausedbyman-made structures Hail • Strongupdracskeepicecrystalsalocandtheycollide withsupercooledwaterdropletsincreasingtheirsize • Eventuallygetsoheavy,theyfallout OtherFormsofPrecipita/on snow Rain (≥0.5mmdiameter) icepellets(sleet) drizzle (<0.5mmdiameter) snowpellets(graupel) Warmprocess:Dropletsarerisingintheupdracs ofacloudandgrowviacollisions Assoonasthedroplets gettooheavytobe keptintheairinthe updracs,theyfalldown asrain,partly evapora/ngwhenfalling throughunsaturated air. Thebiggestraindrops reachasizeof5mm. Largersizesarenotlong- livedandbreakapart whenfalling. Fig.6.3,p.147 Distribu/onofIceandWaterinClouds Fig. 6.4, p. 148 Despite the subfreezing temperatures many supercooled liquid droplets are present here due to the lack of ice nuclei that initiate the growth of ice. Ice will form on particles that possess crystalline characteristics similar to ice (small aerosol or soil particles or pre-existing ice particles). Ver/caltemperatureprofilesoftheenvironment thatleadto(a)snowand(b)rain Remember….Temperaturesinthesnowforminglayermustbeless than-10°C(thatis,10°F)inorderforsignificantsnowgrowthtooccur. Temperature Temperature greater greater than34°F than34°F Fig. 6.20, p. 159 Ver/caltemperatureprofilesoftheenvironment thatleadto(c)freezingrainand(d)rain TornadoOverview Condi/onsNeed: 1. Convec/veInstability 2. WindShearandStrongJet Stream(forrota/on) 3. Trigger TornadoOverview • What/meofyeardotornadosoccurandwhy Timewhenwindshearisthe greatest,andcontrast betweenwarmandcoldair massesarelarge Polarjetdropssouthand provideswindshearoverthe Gulf Hurricanes 4.Trigger Totalwindspeedsofa movingtornado:Recall similarexamplewith hurricanes