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Air Masses and Midlatitude Cyclones

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Title: Air Masses and Midlatitude Cyclones


1
Air Masses and Midlatitude Cyclones
  • ATS 351 Lab 11
  • November 16, 2009

2
Air Masses of North America
  • Air mass extremely large body of air whose
    properties of temperature and humidity are fairly
    similar in any horizontal direction at any given
    latitude
  • Named for their region of origin
  • Continental Polar
  • Continental Arctic
  • Maritime Polar
  • Maritime Tropical
  • Continental Tropical

3
Cold Front
  • Cold, dry stable polar air is replacing warm,
    moist, conditionally unstable subtropical air
  • Steep vertical boundary due to surface friction
    slowing down the surface front
  • Has strong vertical ascent along the surface
    front
  • Strong upper level westerlies push ice crystals
    far ahead of the front, creating cirrus advance
    of the front.
  • Cold, dense air wedges under warm air, forcing
    the warm air upward, producing cumuliform
    clouds
  • Can cause strong convection, severe weather, and
    squall lines.
  • Air cools quickly behind the front


4
Air Masses of North America
  • Continental Polar (cP) Arctic (cA)?
  • Cold, dry, stable air in winter
  • In summer, cP air mass usually brings relief from
    oppressive heat in central and eastern US
  • Maritime Polar (mP)?
  • In winter, cold and dry continental air masses
    are carried over Pacific Ocean where moisture and
    warmth is added
  • Air mass at Pacific Coast is cool, moist, and
    conditionally unstable
  • East of Rockies - brings fair weather and cooler
    temperatures (moisture has been removed by
    mountains)?
  • East coast mP air mass originates in N. Atlantic
  • Storms may develop (heavy rain or snow, coastal
    flooding)?
  • Late winter, early spring

5
Air Masses of North America
  • Maritime Tropical (mT)?
  • Subtropical east Pacific Ocean very warm and
    moist by the time it reaches east coast
  • Heavy precipitation
  • Gulf of Mexico warm, humid subtropical air
  • Formation of dew, fog and low clouds along Gulf
    coast
  • Could lead to record heat waves
  • Continental Tropical (cT)?
  • Source is N Mexico and arid SW only exist in
    summer
  • Hot, dry and conditionally unstable at low levels
  • Clear skies and hot weather (severe drought
    possible)?

6
Air Masses and Fronts
  • A front is a transition zone between two air
    masses of different densities
  • Fronts extend both horizontally and vertically

7
Cold Front
  • Rising motion causes decreased surface pressure
    ahead of the front
  • On a surface pressure map, frontal location can
    be seen by kinks in the isobars, changes in
    wind direction from a southwesterly to a
    northwesterly wind, and decreases in temperature.
  • Pressure is lowest at the surface front.
  • On weather maps, cold fronts are indicated by
    blue lines with triangles pointing in the
    direction of frontal motion (towards warmer air)?

8
Cold Front
9
Warm Front
  • Occurs at the leading edge of an advancing warm,
    moist, subtropical air mass from the Gulf
    replacing a retreating cold, maritime, polar air
    mass from the North Atlantic
  • Slowly advances as cold air recedes moves at
    about half the speed of an average cold front
  • Speed may increase due to daytime mixing
  • Speed may decrease due to nighttime radiational
    cooling
  • Smaller vertical slope than cold front

10
Warm Front
  • Warmer, less-dense air rides up and over the
    colder, more-dense surface air
  • Overrunning
  • Produces clouds and precipitation well in advance
    of the front

11
Warm Front
12
Stationary Front
  • Essentially no movement
  • Surface winds blow parallel to front, but in
    opposite directions on either side of it
  • Separates two air masses
  • Seen often along mountain ranges when cold air
    cannot make it over the mountain ridge

13
Hourly surface observations at Gage, Oklahoma
showing the passage of a primary and secondary
cold front (left) and at Bowling Green, Kentucky
showing the passage of a warm front (right).
Source Wallace and Hobbs, 2006.
14
Occluded Fronts
  • Cold fronts generally move faster than warm
    fronts
  • Occlusion occurs when cold front catches up to
    and overtakes a warm front
  • Occlusions can be warm or cold

15
Dry Lines
  • Think of a dry line as a moisture boundary
  • Separates warm, humid air from warm, dry air
  • Drier air behind dry lines lifts the moist air
    ahead of it, triggering storms along and ahead of
    it
  • Induces lifting along front
  • Often produces severe thunderstorms in OK TX
  • Unique to southern great plains of US because of
    the Rocky mountains and the Gulf of Mexico

16
  • A guide to the symbols for weather fronts that
    may be found on a weather map
  • 1 cold front
  • 2 warm front
  • 3 stationary front
  • 4 occluded front
  • 5 surface trough
  • 6 squall/shear line
  • 7 dry line
  • 8 tropical wave

17
Midlatitude (Extratropical) Cyclone
  • A cyclone (area of low pressure) in the middle
    latitudes (35-70)?
  • Important for global heat transport
  • Help to redistribute energy between the tropics
    (equator) and the poles
  • Often associated with significant weather events
  • Described by the Polar Front Theory
  • Form on boundaries between warm and cold air
  • Cold Polar air meeting warm tropical air

18
Features of a Midlatitude Cyclone
  • Deep low pressure area with attached cold and
    warm fronts
  • Often an occlusion forms, the triple point
    lending to the formation of severe weather
  • Precipitation associated with the cold and warm
    fronts organizes in typical comma cloud
    structure

19
Stages in Wave Cyclone Development
20
Polar Front Theory
  • Initially, there is a stationary front that acts
    as the boundary separating cold, continental
    polar air from warm, maritime tropical air
  • Winds blow parallel to this front on either side
  • Polar Fronts are discontinuous

21
Cyclogenesis
Central Pressure
  • A wave forms on the front due to a shortwave
    disturbance
  • Frontal Wave
  • The front develops a "kink" where the wave is
    developing
  • Precipitation will begin to develop along the
    front
  • Overrunning and lifting

22
Strengthening
  • The cyclonic circulation around the low becomes
    more defined
  • The central pressure intensifies
  • The cold front and warm front have more organized
    motion
  • Cyclone usually pushed east or northeast by the
    winds aloft

23
Mature Cyclone
  • The cold front catches up with the warm front and
    an occlusion forms
  • The cyclone is at its strongest at this point
  • Severe weather often develops near the triple
    point
  • - Intersection of cold, warm, and occluded fronts

24
Dissipation
  • The occlusion grows with time
  • Eventually, the occlusion is so great that the
    supply of warm, moist air into the low is cut off
  • Cold air on both sides
  • When this happens, the system starts to dissipate

25
Interaction with Upper Levels
  • Previous model for cyclone development only
    includes surface characteristics but what
    happens higher up can determine what happens
    below
  • Divergence aloft can help to remove mass from a
    column, hence lowering the surface pressure even
    more

26
Interaction with Upper Levels
  • Downstream of an upper level trough, the air
    tends to diverge
  • If a surface low is located slightly downstream
    of an upper level trough, the divergence will be
    located above the low and help to intensify it

27
Mid-latitude Cyclones The Upper Level Life Cycle
  • A 500 mb trough develops westward of a surface
    stationary front
  • As the 500 mb trough deepens, the associated
    upper level divergence strengthens, helping to
    intensify the surface low
  • Stronger winds aloft force the upper level trough
    to move eastward faster, and eventually it
    becomes located above the surface low
  • When the surface and upper level low are
    stacked, convergence at both levels starts to
    fill the low pressure area, weakening the
    cyclone

28
Mid-latitude Cyclones The Upper Levels
29
Closed Low
  • A closed low is an upper level area of low
    pressure that is completely encircled by at least
    one isobar
  • This may be partially or completely detached from
    the main flow
  • Often results from occlusion of surface
    cyclone
  • These can persist for several days without
    moving and produce several days worth of
    precipitation over the area where they park
  • Called cut-off low when completely
    separated from main flow at upper levels
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