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sci.geo.meteorology (Meteorology) (sci.geo.meteorology) For the discussion of meteorology and related topics. |
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Howard Goldstein wrote:
In the following AFD snippet the forecasters uss a phrase "BETTER TD GRAD IS FARTHER NORTH". Are they likely talking about a temp/dewpoint gradient here or is there another kind of relevant TD gradient? Thanks in advance for enlightening very much an amateur meteorologist with questionable qualifications and dubious talent. ********************** FXUS62 KTBW 260709 AFDTBW WEST CENTRAL AND SOUTHWEST FLORIDA FORECAST DISCUSSION NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE TAMPA BAY AREA - RUSKIN FL 205 AM EST WED NOV 26 2003 .CURRENTLY...SFC ANAL SHOWS LEADING EDGE OF FRONTAL BOUNDARY FROM ABOUT PGD TO VRB. HOWEVER...BETTER TD GRAD IS FARTHER NORTH FROM TPA TO MCO/ORL. BKN TO OVC LOW CLOUDS N OF TPA...AND SCT-BKN CLOUDS CENT AND S FA. FOG IS STILL VERY PATCHY...BUT SUSPECT IT WILL GET A LITTLE MORE WIDESPREAD...ESPEC TPA SOUTH WHERE CLOUDS ARE MORE SCATTERED. [...] Generally, T (alone) is temperature and TD is dewpoint (alone). In scientific notation it would be T with a subscript lowercase d. Dewpoint gradient is an important front-locating parameter, and he is mentioning the discrepancy between where the front has been shown, and where a significant dewpoint gradient actually exists. |
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