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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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#21
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On Dec 11, 8:31*pm, "Eskimo Will" wrote:
"Neil" wrote in message b.com... On 11/12/2011 18:06, Eskimo Will wrote: "fred" wrote in message .... how accurate (in %age terms) is the GFS at 120h ? Never mind the GFS detail Fred, look at the synoptics. A circa 200 knot has been consistently forecast to slam into England and Wales on Friday. Associated with this will be a deepening depression of the order 940 hPa with a wind field wider than last Thursday's storm due to a different deepening mechanism (Norwegian left exit and high specific humidity entrained as opposed to Shapiro Keyser - confluent trough/right entrance runner). This means that the damaging storm force winds will be spread over a wider area. Precise track depends critically on when the deepening phase will begin. High risk area has to be northern England to central Scotland for the most damaging winds, but the MetO will refine that in due course. If I was you Fred I'd prepare for a storm of greater ferocity, and longer lasting than last week and hope for the best. My personal feeling is that northern England should be very worried too and all parts of the UK will at least have gales, except perhaps the far north on the northern side of low, but even here the northerly could be fierce. This is a serious low system and should not be under-estimated.. http://www.lyneside.demon.co.uk/Hayt...antage_Pro.htm Will Hand (Haytor, Devon, 1017 feet asl) --------------------------------------------- With regards to the track of this system, I've seen elsewhere comments such as as 'as the pressure drops, the low will veer North' or something like that at least! My question is why? Why will a deepening low pressure system move North rather than South? Occasionally they do move south. What happens is that the low distorts the thickness field through differential advection of warm and cold air. Depressions are steered along the thickness (mean temperature) gradient. Sometimes if the warm advection is stronger this distorts the thickness pattern in such a way as to veer the thickness gradient and the low moves SE, but mostly yes they do turn left. there are other dynamics going on such as conservation of vorticity etc, but I'll leave that. HTH Will -- ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Taking it a bit further. As air moves north the earth's vorticity(spin) increases and for the air to conserve its total vorticity(spin) it must decrease its relative vorticity. The latter being related to its curvature. Eventually acquiring negative relative vorticity which gives anticyclonic curvature and the turning to the south we are talking about. So as Will explained, its the thermal wind field combined with this effect. Nothing is simple. Friction plays its part as well as the air slows and encounters land masses. This at least straightens the trough slope in the vertical which happens anyway as the air in the depression mixes. The difficulty in predicting comes from any late tightening of the thermal field from entrainment which will affect the track. This is the problem with predicting the track of the intense depression of Friday. Can be sub grid scale, but also poorly understood and parametrerised feedbacks in the models Len Wood Wembury --------------------------------------------------------------------- |
#22
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On Dec 11, 11:29*pm, Len Wood wrote:
On Dec 11, 8:31*pm, "Eskimo Will" wrote: "Neil" wrote in message eb.com... On 11/12/2011 18:06, Eskimo Will wrote: "fred" wrote in message .... how accurate (in %age terms) is the GFS at 120h ? Never mind the GFS detail Fred, look at the synoptics. A circa 200 knot has been consistently forecast to slam into England and Wales on Friday. Associated with this will be a deepening depression of the order 940 hPa with a wind field wider than last Thursday's storm due to a different deepening mechanism (Norwegian left exit and high specific humidity entrained as opposed to Shapiro Keyser - confluent trough/right entrance runner). This means that the damaging storm force winds will be spread over a wider area. Precise track depends critically on when the deepening phase will begin. High risk area has to be northern England to central Scotland for the most damaging winds, but the MetO will refine that in due course. If I was you Fred I'd prepare for a storm of greater ferocity, and longer lasting than last week and hope for the best. My personal feeling is that northern England should be very worried too and all parts of the UK will at least have gales, except perhaps the far north on the northern side of low, but even here the northerly could be fierce. This is a serious low system and should not be under-estimated. http://www.lyneside.demon.co.uk/Hayt...antage_Pro.htm Will Hand (Haytor, Devon, 1017 feet asl) --------------------------------------------- With regards to the track of this system, I've seen elsewhere comments such as as 'as the pressure drops, the low will veer North' or something like that at least! My question is why? Why will a deepening low pressure system move North rather than South? Occasionally they do move south. What happens is that the low distorts the thickness field through differential advection of warm and cold air. Depressions are steered along the thickness (mean temperature) gradient.. Sometimes if the warm advection is stronger this distorts the thickness pattern in such a way as to veer the thickness gradient and the low moves SE, but mostly yes they do turn left. there are other dynamics going on such as conservation of vorticity etc, but I'll leave that. HTH Will -- --------------------------------------------------------------------------- -------------------------------- Taking it a bit further. As air moves north the earth's vorticity(spin) increases and for the air to conserve its total vorticity(spin) it must decrease its relative vorticity. The latter being related to its curvature. Eventually acquiring negative relative vorticity which gives anticyclonic curvature and the turning to the south we are talking about. So as Will explained, its the thermal wind field combined with this effect. Nothing is simple. Friction plays its part as well as the air slows and encounters land masses. This at least straightens the trough slope in the vertical which happens anyway as the air in the depression mixes. The difficulty in predicting comes from any late tightening of the thermal field from entrainment which will affect the track. This is the problem with predicting the track of the intense depression of Friday. Can be sub grid scale, but also poorly understood and parametrerised feedbacks in the models Len Wood Wembury --------------------------------------------------------------------- I now have a severe headache. |
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