View Single Post
  #13   Report Post  
Old May 29th 08, 09:50 AM posted to uk.sci.weather
ronaldbutton ronaldbutton is offline
external usenet poster
 
First recorded activity by Weather-Banter: Mar 2008
Posts: 522
Default massive pressure drop in Leeds

Stephen ,wasn't my 5mb drop in an hour very significant ?,we can only be
about 40 miles from you.......


RonB
wrote in message
...
On 28 May, 14:38, Tudor Hughes wrote:

It sounds as if it was thunderstorm-related but extremely rapid
falls can be caused by gravity waves. One of these affected west
London (Sunbury) on about 19 Jan 1977. We had a mercury barometer in
the laboratory and you could actually just about see the mercury
surface falling. I cannot remember the exact figures (it has been
written about, probably in "Weather") but 8 mb in 5 minutes seems to
ring a bell. There were gusts to 30 kn but nothing more in an
otherwise breezy cloudy SW'ly. The expected End Of The World did not
happen.

Tudor Hughes, Warlingham, Surrey


Well-remembered, Tudor. (It was actually the 25th of January, but
what's six days in 31 years ... !) Heathrow had a fall of 7 mbar in 5
min and I can recall first-hand accounts of the duty observers
thinking either all their barometers had broken at the same time, or
the world/their career/their life was ending, or quite possibly all
four. Must have been hairy on final approach I'm sure. Reference in
Weather for those who want to look it up:

Harvey, I. G. and Warren, D. E. (1978) Observations of rapid pressure
variations: 25 January 1977. Weather, 33, pp. 11-17.

That reminds me: I haven't seen a really good 'jiggly' barograph trace
from a series of thunderstorms for a long time now. Must be overdue.

No sign of the Northern England rapid drop this morning down this way
(fairly steady 8 mbar fall 22-04z, then fairly steady 1001-1002 mbar
until a rise set in 13z), so there must have been a significant
additional gradient somewhere for a while ...

--
Stephen Burt
Stratfield Mortimer, Berkshire