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Who Cares About the Weather?

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Presentation on theme: "Who Cares About the Weather?"— Presentation transcript:

1 Who Cares About the Weather?
Julie Gondzar DayWeather, Inc. Cheyenne, Wyoming

2 What will be covered? Earth’s Circulations and the Jet Stream
Atmospheric Pressure Systems Understanding Frontal Systems and Cloud Formations Snow Storms & Arctic Air Masses Wyoming Wind Precipitation and Radar Thunderstorms and Supercells Reading Maps and Finding Real-Time Weather Information A Little About Weather Models Road Weather Forecasting WYDOT and National Weather Service Forecasts

3 Okay, go ahead…now’s your chance!

4 Welcome to Earth.

5 What is Weather? Answer: Physics + Math Ideal Gas Law
1st Law of Thermodynamics Newton’s Second Law of Motion Hydrostatic Law Conservation of Mass

6 Earth Circulations & Jet Stream

7 Earth Circulations & Jet Stream

8 Earth Circulations & Jet Stream

9 The Jet Stream Over Wyoming
Summer Season Polar jet stream stays to the north Subtropical jet stream is more active (monsoon) Winter Season Polar jet stream more active over Wyoming Subtropical jet stream stays to the south Sometimes responsible for high wind events

10 Jet Stream Winds

11 Atmospheric Pressure Systems

12 Atmospheric Pressure Systems

13 Atmospheric Pressure Systems
stable pressure system unstable pressure system

14 Atmospheric Pressure Systems
clouds form clear skies stable unstable

15 Atmospheric Pressure Systems
Not all high/low pressure systems are alike Depends on their structure and origination Cold core and warm core systems Example: High pressure in summer (warm, carries moisture) High pressure in winter (bitter cold, dry)

16 Frontal Systems & Cloud Formations

17 Frontal Systems & Cloud Formations

18 Frontal Systems & Cloud Formations

19 Frontal Systems & Cloud Formations

20 Frontal Systems & Cloud Formations

21 Frontal Systems & Cloud Formations

22 Frontal Systems & Cloud Formations

23 Snow Storms & Arctic Air Masses

24 Snow Storms & Arctic Air Masses
In Wyoming, arctic air comes from two places: Northern Canada Siberia Often times, sea surface temperatures forewarn us of an arctic outbreak in Wyoming.

25 Snow Storms & Arctic Air Masses

26 Snow Storms & Arctic Air Masses

27 High Winds in Wyoming

28 WIND: A love-hate relationship

29 Wyoming Wind Strongest Winds: October – March Reason:
Strong jet stream winds mix to surface Cold front moving through (pressure gradient) Chinook winds Gap winds (Bernoulli Effect) Strong gusts from thunderstorms

30

31 Wyoming Wind

32 Wyoming Wind

33 Wyoming Wind – Bernoulli’s Equation

34 Wyoming Wind – Hot Spots

35 Wyoming Wind Problems: Wind damage is very different than other states
High sustained winds  truck blow-overs Increased slick roads Blowing snow  low visibility & slick roads Drifting snow on roads Decreases temperature of road surface Quite often leads to road closures

36 Wyoming Wind – Not Completely Bad!
Strong winds CAN keep us warm in the winter Let me introduce…. The Chinook Wind Mountains High Plains

37 Precipitation Types & Understanding Radar

38 Fair Weather Thunderstorms & Supercells

39 Wyoming Thunderstorms
Two Types Fair weather thunderstorms (non-severe) Supercell thunderstorms (severe) Distinguishing Factors Size of hail Rotation

40 Fair Weather Thunderstorms
No rotation Need warm air, moisture Air lifts, forms cloud and grows larger Cold air aloft increases this Strong & gusty winds Heavy rain Small to moderate size hail

41 Supercells (Severe Thunderstorms)
Rotating thunderstorm (mesocyclone) Need warm air, moisture, wind shear and trigger (front) Air lifts, cloud grows rapidly Cold air aloft increases this Strong or damaging winds Heavy rain Moderate to large size hail Possible tornado development

42 Tornados not a guarantee!
Severe thunderstorms do not always produce a tornado Large hail (low visibility, ice on road) Heavy rain (low visibility, standing water on roads) Flash flooding (rising water, bridge damage) Damaging winds (trees or signs down)

43 How do Tornadoes Form?

44 Identifying Severe Thunderstorms
On radar: look for “hook-echo”

45 Reading Maps & Finding Real-Time Weather Information

46 1 millibar (mb) = 1 hPa (hectopascal)
Reading Maps 1 millibar (mb) = 1 hPa (hectopascal) Jet stream map – 300 mb (~30,000 ft) Pressure systems & frontal motion – 500 mb (~18,000 ft) Strong winds, moisture & snow temp – 700mb (~10,000 ft) Surface pressure & temperature – 850 mb (~5,000 ft) NCAR Real-Time Weather MesoWest Weather Data

47 Reading Surface Maps

48 A Little Bit About Numerical Weather Models

49 Numerical Weather Models
Global Forecast System (GFS) North American Model (NAM) Weather Research and Forecasting Model (WRF) Rapid Update Cycle (RUC) Canadian Regional and Global Models European Center for Medium Range Weather Forecasting (ECMWF) Japanese Meteorological Agency (JMA)

50

51 A weather model is only as good as the data given to it.
Where models struggle. Geography and terrain are very difficult for models to see Placement and track of weather systems over time Timing of weather system Typically struggle as the start of season-changes (winter/spring) A weather model is only as good as the data given to it.

52 Road Weather Forecasting A different beast.

53 Road Weather Forecasting
First: Nail down atmospheric forecast for period Determine surface type and condition Important factors: Sky coverage (sunshine or clouds?) Wind speed and direction (warming/cooling surface) Sun angle (time of day for start of cooling) Rate of temperature decrease Type of precipitation Assume worst case scenario (no plows/treatment)

54 Road Temperature Model?
Working on developing an in-house road temperature model called, METRo Using numerical weather model data Using real-time RWIS data


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