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Another stratwarm underway!
:-)
http://acdb-ext.gsfc.nasa.gov/Data_s...2012_merra.pdf Mean zonal wind has decreased markedly at 60N. http://www.lyneside.demon.co.uk/Hayt...antage_Pro.htm Will Hand (Haytor, Devon, 1017 feet asl) --------------------------------------------- |
Another stratwarm underway!
"Eskimo Will" wrote in message ... :-) http://acdb-ext.gsfc.nasa.gov/Data_s...2012_merra.pdf Mean zonal wind has decreased markedly at 60N. Merry Christmas everyone :-) Will, Your link shows the zonal wind. The stratwarm is shown he http://acdb-ext.gsfc.nasa.gov/Data_s...2012_merra.pdf But if it is going to bring us cold weather surely the stratwarm has to happen at the right longitude. What is the longitude for the stratwarms that have brought us cold? How can we tell where this stratwarm is happening? Cheers, Alastair. |
Another stratwarm underway!
In article ,
Eskimo Will writes: :-) http://acdb-ext.gsfc.nasa.gov/Data_s...tdata/annual/m erra/u60n_150_2012_merra.pdf Mean zonal wind has decreased markedly at 60N. I take it that the mauvish line is the one that is relevant? That does seem to have taken a very marked dip in recent days. -- John Hall "Whenever people agree with me I always feel I must be wrong." Oscar Wilde |
Another stratwarm underway!
On Wed, 26 Dec 2012 10:39:35 -0000, "Alastair McDonald"
wrote: But if it is going to bring us cold weather surely the stratwarm has to happen at the right longitude. It's a bit more complex than that. A disruption to the zonal flow anywhere in our hemisphere will have a downstream effect right round the globe - dependent on the strength and the orientation of the disruption. I doubt there is a 'right' longitude. -- Freddie Bayston Hill Shropshire 102m AMSL http://www.hosiene.co.uk/weather/ https://twitter.com/#!/BaystonHillWx*for hourly reports* |
Another stratwarm underway!
"Freddie" wrote in message .net... On Wed, 26 Dec 2012 10:39:35 -0000, "Alastair McDonald" wrote: But if it is going to bring us cold weather surely the stratwarm has to happen at the right longitude. It's a bit more complex than that. A disruption to the zonal flow anywhere in our hemisphere will have a downstream effect right round the globe - dependent on the strength and the orientation of the disruption. I doubt there is a 'right' longitude. Yes, but the net the zonal flow must always be zero otherwise all the air would gather at one longitude. So what happens is that the flow is a closed loop, but becomes more wavy as the stratwarm forms. To a first approximation, we will get cold weather if a wave/loop comes south over us, so the stratwarm has to form at 180 degrees west to produce the warm northern loop. In fact for us to get snow we need the southern loop of polar air to form over Russia and expand westward. I don't think a stratwarm centred on Moscow would bring us snow. Cheers, Alastair. |
Another stratwarm underway!
On Wednesday, December 26, 2012 10:39:35 AM UTC, Alastair wrote:
"Eskimo Will" wrote in message ... :-) http://acdb-ext.gsfc.nasa.gov/Data_s...2012_merra.pdf Mean zonal wind has decreased markedly at 60N. Merry Christmas everyone :-) Will, Your link shows the zonal wind. The stratwarm is shown he http://acdb-ext.gsfc.nasa.gov/Data_s...2012_merra.pdf But if it is going to bring us cold weather surely the stratwarm has to happen at the right longitude. What is the longitude for the stratwarms that have brought us cold? How can we tell where this stratwarm is happening? Cheers, Alastair. It's really not difficult to do the research guys. The last minor SSW event (around 13th Dec) produced precisely *no* discernible effect on the UK weather.........not quite what some on here predicted. A minor event is currently happening. They quite often do during the boreal winter. The forecast is for the zonal wind at 10hpa to *increase* and certainly not to decrease, or to reverse. Thus the chances of this event affecting the surface would be extremely remote. The Meto 6+ day forecast implies they think exactly the same as I do. http://wekuw.met.fu-berlin.de/~Aktue...w/wdiag/ts.php You can see the reversal caused by the SSW of mid-dec can easily be seen in the 10hpa winds. It's not hard to do the research on thisand learn. We've had people inferring that every SSW at all magnitudes will affect the UK weather in some way. That's plain daft. There is no research that says that* and it's just the butterfly's wings and the Atlantic hurricane stuff yet again. Basically, just ignore them. They know not what they say. *)) *All I say is show us the research that shows that they do. It's not much to ask. |
Another stratwarm underway!
On Wed, 26 Dec 2012 12:22:18 -0000, "Alastair McDonald"
wrote: Yes, but the net the zonal flow must always be zero otherwise all the air would gather at one longitude. That's not strictly true, as you are not taking into account vertical motion. I don't think a stratwarm centred on Moscow would bring us snow. In my earlier reply, I was actually going to add that there are probably _bad_ places for it to occur - but when I wrote the sentence it looked a bit patronising, so I deleted it. I agree with what you are saying up to a point, but as I said before I think you are over simplifying the dynamics. -- Freddie Bayston Hill Shropshire 102m AMSL http://www.hosiene.co.uk/weather/ https://twitter.com/#!/BaystonHillWx*for hourly reports* |
Another stratwarm underway!
"Freddie" wrote in message .net... On Wed, 26 Dec 2012 12:22:18 -0000, "Alastair McDonald" wrote: Yes, but the net the zonal flow must always be zero otherwise all the air would gather at one longitude. That's not strictly true, as you are not taking into account vertical motion. I don't think a stratwarm centred on Moscow would bring us snow. In my earlier reply, I was actually going to add that there are probably _bad_ places for it to occur - but when I wrote the sentence it looked a bit patronising, so I deleted it. I agree with what you are saying up to a point, but as I said before I think you are over simplifying the dynamics. Yes, I can find it difficult to express an honest opinion without sounding abrasive. For instance, isn't it Will who is being simplistic expecting that every stratwarm will lead to a cold UK? But perhaps he is just being optimistic :-) My ideas are simple because I am trying to understand the underlying mechanism. If stratwarms are the missing piece of the jigsaw, then it may be possible to construct a simple model of polar winters. I think that within fifty years we will be able to predict the movements of the polar vortex and the polar night jet stream, if they still exist then. (With no polar ice we may have a permanent stratwarm, and no polar vortex.) As I see it the stratwarm does not replace the polar vortex, just push it off the pole. Am I correct? So it depends in which direction that nudge is - into the eastern or western hemispheres. I also see the polar night jet determining the polar front. When a stratwarm occurs the length of the polar night jet increases but its average latitude remains the same. If a large oscilation brings the polar front south over the UK then we get cold weather. But the oscilations in the polar night jet possibly depend on topography and atmospheric tides. So I agree that I did oversimplify the dynamics but I do believe that they can be determined. Cheers, Alastair. |
Another stratwarm underway!
"Alastair McDonald" wrote in message ... "Freddie" wrote in message .net... On Wed, 26 Dec 2012 12:22:18 -0000, "Alastair McDonald" wrote: Yes, but the net the zonal flow must always be zero otherwise all the air would gather at one longitude. That's not strictly true, as you are not taking into account vertical motion. I don't think a stratwarm centred on Moscow would bring us snow. In my earlier reply, I was actually going to add that there are probably _bad_ places for it to occur - but when I wrote the sentence it looked a bit patronising, so I deleted it. I agree with what you are saying up to a point, but as I said before I think you are over simplifying the dynamics. Yes, I can find it difficult to express an honest opinion without sounding abrasive. For instance, isn't it Will who is being simplistic expecting that every stratwarm will lead to a cold UK? But perhaps he is just being optimistic :-) I have never said that every stratwarm leads to a cold UK. What I do say is that it increases the chances. My reasoning is simple. A stratwarm will decrease the zonal wind above the jet (like the present one which is very dramatic at 60N now http://acdb-ext.gsfc.nasa.gov/Data_s...2012_merra.pdf ) .. This decrease or even reversal will extract energy from the jet due to increased turbulence and thus increase the potential for blocking. Blocking increases the chances of winter cold in the UK. There is also a feedback as stratwarms are usually initiated due to breaking Rossby waves at the tropopause. This present one certainly was as the warming is still not evident at 10hPa but is now very suignificant at 150 hPa. Will -- http://www.lyneside.demon.co.uk/Hayt...antage_Pro.htm Will Hand (Haytor, Devon, 1017 feet asl) --------------------------------------------- |
Another stratwarm underway!
At 60-90 deg N the forecast reversal of mean zonal wind is clear in ECMWF's 10-day (at days 9 and 10): http://wekuw.met.fu-berlin.de/~Aktue...&var=u&lng=eng This is always worth a look as well. I'll get interested when the EPV points polewards: http://wekuw.met.fu-berlin.de/~Aktue...w/wdiag/ts.php Stephen. |
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