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Ch. 12 Study materials Questions for review: 1-6, 8-13, 15-19 Questions for thought: 2 Wednesday (Mid-latitude cyclones) Chapter 12 (313-329) Friday (Mid-latitude cyclones) Chapter 12 (313-335) Monday (Thunderstorms) Chapter 14 (371-394) Low pressure systems Always … Cyclones: winds spiral into low • CCW in northern hemisphere Single air mass Tropical • Warm core: warm air rises, forming low Polar front 2-3 air masses, 2 fronts • Cold air pushed by warm • Warm air pushed by cold Polar front theory Polar front theory Genesis & movement of cyclones Develops as a weak disturbance Strengthening of system • Wave develops Occlusion over east coast, western North Atlantic Cyclone is cut off, leaving stationary front Typical life cycle Cyclogenesis E of Japan Guided by upper level winds to central CA E to Rocky Mountains Intensifies coming down mountains Strong storm moves to NE USA Complete occlusion over N Atlantic s i c s a n d F r o n t s What you see on the ground Warm front approaches Deepening cloud cover Increasing light precipitation Warm front passes Warmer, sunny conditions for ~1 day Winds shift from S to SW Cold front Strong, fast-moving band of clouds Heavy precipitation Then, cold and clear Polar front—step 1 Winds Polar front—step 2 Winds Polar front—step 3 Winds Polar front—step 4 Winds Polar front—step 5 Winds Where do mid-latitude cyclones tend to form? Lee-side lows Hatteras low Alberta Clipper Nor’easters Lee-side low Where do mid-latitude cyclones tend to form? Topic: Northeasters Mid-latitude cyclones that develop or intensify off the eastern seaboard of North America then move NE along coast Vertical structure Vertical Structure of Deep Dynamic Lows Dynamic low = intensify with height When upper-level divergence is stronger than surface convergence (more air is taken out of the top than the bottom) surface pressure drops and low intensifies Decay cycle Self-sustaining Fig. 2, p. 320 Vertical Structure of Deep Dynamic Lows Topic: Convergence and divergence Convergence between ridge and trough, divergence between trough and ridge Convergence and divergence Fig. 3, p. 320 Upper Level Waves Long (Rossby) waves and short waves Planetary scale pattern vs. subcontinental scale Upper level waves Baroclinic (vs. barotropic) Winds cross (vs. parallel) temperature contours Cold and warm air advection Baroclinic instability The Necessary Ingredients for Development of Mid-latitude Storm Baroclinic instability Upper-Air Support: Differential temperature advection amplifies the upper level wave; Cut-off low leads to dissipation Role of the polar jet stream: Removes air (through divergence) from surface cyclone Supplies air (through convergence) to surface anti-cyclone Baroclinic instability Fig. 12-10, p. 323 The Necessary Ingredients for Development of Mid-latitude Storm Topic: Jet Streaks and Storms Entrance and exit regions associated with divergence and convergence, right exit allows divergence. Fig. 5, p. 324 Fig. 6, p. 324 Role of the polar jet stream Polar jet swings over a developing mid-latitude cyclone, An area of divergence (D) draws warm surface air upward An area of convergence (C) allows cold air to sink The jet stream removes air above the surface storm, which causes surface pressures to drop and the storm to intensify. When the surface storm moves northeastward and occludes, it no longer has the upper-level support of diverging air, and the surface storm gradually dies out. Fig. 12-11, p. 325 Vorticity, Divergence and Development of Cyclones Vorticity is a measure of the spin of small air parcels Positive: cyclonic Negative: anticyclonic Divergence aloft causes an increase in the cyclonic vorticity of surface cyclones = cyclogenesis and upward air movement Vorticity on a Spinning Planet Earth’s vorticity always positive (north) Larger near poles Vorticity on a Spinning Planet Relative vorticity: curvature + shear Trough: cyclonic, ridge: anticyclonic Changes in vorticity through a Rossby wave Vorticity on a Spinning Planet Absolute vorticity Earth + relative Always positive in the north • Lowest near equator and where relative vorticity is negative Increase is related to upper level convergence Decrease is related to upper level divergence Vorticity maxima/minima Maximum positive/negative relative vorticity is at sharpest turn Therefore absolute maxima/minima are at sharpest turns