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uk.sci.weather (UK Weather) (uk.sci.weather) For the discussion of daily weather events, chiefly affecting the UK and adjacent parts of Europe, both past and predicted. The discussion is open to all, but contributions on a practical scientific level are encouraged. |
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#1
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Darren Prescott drew our attention to a possible northerly airstream
for the coming weekend and this possibility is worth checking. The forecast 500 mb-chart for 18th September '03 shows a long tongue of cold air stretching from the top of Scandinavia in a SW direction to the SW of Iceland. It seems to be brought about by a long chain of NE winds coming out of the Arctic Ocean north of Scandinavia. As the cold trough swings E'wards towards the British Isles from 18th to 20th September, warm air drifts from Spain NE'wards towards N Germany. On 21st, the cold air from the trough lies just to the W of Britain and I expect the cold front to be just on the W coast of Ireland. At the same time, a tongue of warm air is drawn NNW'wards from N Germany up the N Sea to the W of Norway, thus turning the axis of the cold trough over the Atlantic in a N-S direction as it approaches Ireland. On 22nd September the cold air should cover the British Isles with winds from a NW direction. On 23rd, warmer atlantic air approaches the British Isles from the W. By the 24th a HP builds up over the SW of Britian in front of a LP over mid-Atlantic and draws warmer ait into Europe over the next 3 or 4 days. So this one appears to be only a small, cold period from the NW. Cheers, Keith |
#2
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![]() ================================================== ================== This posting expresses the personal view and opinions of the author. Something which everyone on this planet should be able to do. ================================================== ================== I'd hardly call it cold Keith, not with sea temps circa 3 deg C above normal in northern latitudes, and it is only still September. Will. -- " Love begins when judgement ceases " ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- A COL BH site in East Dartmoor at Haytor, Devon 310m asl (1017 feet). mailto: www: http://www.lyneside.demon.co.uk DISCLAIMER - All views and opinions expressed by myself are personal and do not necessarily represent those of my employer. ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Keith Darlington wrote in message ... Darren Prescott drew our attention to a possible northerly airstream for the coming weekend and this possibility is worth checking. The forecast 500 mb-chart for 18th September '03 shows a long tongue of cold air stretching from the top of Scandinavia in a SW direction to the SW of Iceland. It seems to be brought about by a long chain of NE winds coming out of the Arctic Ocean north of Scandinavia. As the cold trough swings E'wards towards the British Isles from 18th to 20th September, warm air drifts from Spain NE'wards towards N Germany. On 21st, the cold air from the trough lies just to the W of Britain and I expect the cold front to be just on the W coast of Ireland. At the same time, a tongue of warm air is drawn NNW'wards from N Germany up the N Sea to the W of Norway, thus turning the axis of the cold trough over the Atlantic in a N-S direction as it approaches Ireland. On 22nd September the cold air should cover the British Isles with winds from a NW direction. On 23rd, warmer atlantic air approaches the British Isles from the W. By the 24th a HP builds up over the SW of Britian in front of a LP over mid-Atlantic and draws warmer ait into Europe over the next 3 or 4 days. So this one appears to be only a small, cold period from the NW. Cheers, Keith |
#3
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![]() "Keith Darlington" wrote in message ... "Next cold period" - you say it like we've had one recently ! Joe |
#4
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In uk.sci.weather on Sun, 14 Sep 2003 at 14:15:15, Keith Darlington
wrote : Darren Prescott drew our attention to a possible northerly airstream for the coming weekend and this possibility is worth checking. On 22nd September the cold air should cover the British Isles with winds from a NW direction. On 23rd, warmer atlantic air approaches the British Isles from the W. By the 24th a HP builds up over the SW of Britian in front of a LP over mid-Atlantic and draws warmer ait into Europe over the next 3 or 4 days. So this one appears to be only a small, cold period from the NW. Us cold-weather-lovers are also straw-clutchers. ![]() Cold enough for the first ground-frost this autumn? BTW, on the Wettercarte pressure maps, what does the black line to the N of Britain represent? Is it a jet stream? -- Paul Hyett, Cheltenham, England |
#5
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![]() "Paul Hyett" wrote in message ... snip BTW, on the Wettercarte pressure maps, what does the black line to the N of Britain represent? Is it a jet stream? .... I think you are looking at the 552dam contour (used to track major long-wave pattern changes) - see the link below for more on output from various centres with examples, explanation etc. http://homepage.ntlworld.com/booty.w...dels/sites.htm Martin. |
#6
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In uk.sci.weather on Mon, 15 Sep 2003 at 07:31:47, martin rowley wrote :
... I think you are looking at the 552dam contour (used to track major long-wave pattern changes) - see the link below for more on output from various centres with examples, explanation etc. http://homepage.ntlworld.com/booty.w...dels/sites.htm Thanks for this - very useful. Just one question : If hPa is the same as millibars (as seems to be the case), why have two names for it? It's like Celcius & Centigrade. -- Paul Hyett, Cheltenham, England |
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Paul Hyett wrote:
Just one question : If hPa is the same as millibars (as seems to be the case), why have two names for it? They are not the same, they just appear to be because 1 hPa = 1 millibar. The bar is one of the old units for pressure. The pascal is the SI unit. It's like Celcius & Centigrade. Those were two names for the same thing. The word Centigrade was officially dropped in 1948. The correct name is Celsius. As with general conversion to the metric system, transition takes time and effort. The hPa replaced the millibar as the legal unit of pressure for UK aviation in 1996, but the hPa value must still be described as 'millibars' in spoken communication between ground and air. Lots of stuff about units at the official SI website: www1.bipm.org/en/si/derived_units/2-2-2.html |
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#9
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#10
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Dave Ludlow wrote:
So why bother changing the name at all? That sounds like "Why SI?". Note that there are many different units of pressu pascal bar atmosphere inch of water mm of water inch of mercury mm of mercury foot of water pound per square inch pound per square foot ton(UK) per square foot ton(US) per square foot Aviation has been using multiple units for weather (inch of mercury, pascal, bar). More units are in legal and technical specificiations (pound/inch², ton/inch²). Units of measurement for aviation are of international importance and agreed via ICAO. It has compiled a standard set of units: "The standardized system is based on the International System of Units (SI) and will eventually eliminate the use of different units of measurement for the same quantity and provide for the standardized application of all units of measurement for those quantities used in air and ground operations." www.icao.int/icao/en/pub/memo.htm |
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