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WINTER STORMS MSC 118, 2/12/14. Prof. Sharan Majumdar. http://orca.rsmas.miami.edu/~majumdar
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Page 1: MSC 118, 2/12/14. Prof. Sharan Majumdar. majumdar.

WINTER STORMS

MSC 118, 2/12/14. Prof. Sharan Majumdar. http://orca.rsmas.miami.edu/~majumdar

Page 2: MSC 118, 2/12/14. Prof. Sharan Majumdar. majumdar.

Outline

1. Structure and Formation of Winter

Storms

2. Winter Weather in Jan-Feb 2014

a. Polar Vortex

b. Alberta Clipper

c. Atlanta two weeks ago

d. Today’s storm!

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1. Structure of Winter Storms

Typical structure of most winter storms, although they can be very different.

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A Typical Winter Storm

Surface low pressure system, usually <1000 mb.

Warm and cold fronts, although the low may be occluded (fronts weakened).

Heaviest rain or snow in the ‘head’ of the storm system, with possible banding.

Squally rain or snow along the cold front.

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Winter storm formation: Ingredients

Favorable jet stream position aloft.

Cold polar air coming from north.

Sharp ‘temperature gradient’.

Availability of moisture.

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Norwegian Cyclone Model Initial ‘frontal boundary’ separating cold and

warm air. A “wave” forms along the front as an upper-air

disturbance in the jet stream moves over it. Front develops a kink where wave develops.

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Isotherms

Isobars

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2a. Polar Vortex: January 2014

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“The planetary-scale cyclonic circulation, centered generally in the polar regions, extending from the middle troposphere to the  stratosphere. The westerly airflow is largely a manifestation of the thermal wind above the polar frontal zone of middle and subpolar latitudes. The vortex is strongest in winter when the pole-to-equator temperature gradient is strongest. In the Northern Hemisphere, the vortex has two centers in the mean, one near Baffin Island and the other over northeast Siberia”.

AMS Glossary of Meteorology

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Winds in the stratosphere

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Winds in the stratosphere

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2b. Alberta Clipper Storms, Jan-Feb 2014

“A fast moving low pressure system that moves southeast out of Canadian Province of Alberta (southwest Canada) through the Plains, Midwest, and Great Lakes region usually during the winter. This low pressure area is usually accompanied by light snow, strong winds, and colder temperatures.”

AMS Glossary of Meteorology

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Craziness in Atlanta, 1/28/14

National Weather Service Summary

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This week’s storm (11-13 Feb 2014)

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Will this NAM forecast verify?

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Nor’Easter A cyclonic storm of the east coast of North

America, so called because the winds over the coastal area are from the northeast.

They may occur at any time of year but are most frequent and most violent between September and April. Northeast storms usually develop in lower–middle latitudes (30°–40°N) within 100 miles east or west of the coastline. They progress generally northward to northeastward and typically attain maximum intensity near New England and the Maritime Provinces.

AMS Glossary of Meteorology

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