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Old October 26th 06, 10:25 AM posted to uk.sci.weather
Philip Eden Philip Eden is offline
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First recorded activity by Weather-Banter: Jul 2003
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Default Record (extratropical storm) pressure rise?


"Tudor Hughes" wrote :
On Oct 26, 12:03 am, "Richard Dixon" wrote:
Dear All,

Does anybody know the most rapid recorded pressure rise during the
passage of an extratropical system? I just tried googling with little
success, I'm sure we've talked about it before on here.

In "Weather", March 1975, there is a short article (M W Stubbs)
on an unusually deep Low that passed more or less directly over OWS "D"
(44N, 41W) at 2025Z on 29 Jan 1972. The lowest pressure recorded was
947.5 mb. At 2000Z the pressure was 955.3, 3-hr tendency -35.0 mb.
From various other figures quoted one can deduce that the 3-hr tendency

at 2025Z was -41 mb. At 2025Z the pressure then rose 22.6 mb in 35
minutes(!), and the 2100Z ob shows 340°/85 kn, sky obscured, heavy
showers, pressure 970.1 mb. At 2300Z, the last ob quoted, the
pressure was 987.8 mb, tendency +32.5 in 3 hrs. Extrapolating to
2325Z, the 3-hr tendency would be +40 to +41 mb.

That's the one I remember reading about ... I'm pretty sure that's
the North Atlantic record, but I've no idea whether the North Pacific
- or indeed the Southern Ocean -- has done better (or worse!)

Philip