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Frontogenesis Frontogenesis: The generation of intensity of a front Warm air merged onto colder air Temperature gradient amplified at least one order of.

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Presentation on theme: "Frontogenesis Frontogenesis: The generation of intensity of a front Warm air merged onto colder air Temperature gradient amplified at least one order of."— Presentation transcript:

1 Frontogenesis Frontogenesis: The generation of intensity of a front Warm air merged onto colder air Temperature gradient amplified at least one order of magnitude A good example of non-frontal zone boundary is. Mesoscale fronts: land-sea breeze, storm outflow (a few hours) Synoptic scale fronts: fronts on the weather maps (many days) Frontogenesis: the formation of a front Frontolysis: the decay of a front dryline

2 Frontogenesis Kinematics and thermodynamics of Frontogenesis: 2D frontogenesis (F): Frontogenesis function First law of thermodynamics Diabatic heating (e.g., latent heat, radiation)

3 Frontogenesis Assume that winds do no vary along the front and x axis //  lines, y x    0 Inhomogeneous diabatic heating Confluence/diffluence Tilting effect [ ]

4 Frontogenesis (1) Confluence/diffluence y x    Frontogenesis, F> 0 y x    y x    y x    Frontolysis. F < 0

5 Frontogenesis (1) Confluence/diffluence

6 Frontogenesis (2) Tilting effect z y    Frontogenesis, F> 0 z y    Frontolysis. F < 0 z y    z y    N E

7 Frontogenesis y x    (3) Quasi-horizontal variation due to diabatic heating Frontogenesis, F> 0Frontolysis. F < 0 Cold, cloudy Warm solar heating Day Night y x    Cold, cloudy, less cooling Warm side, longwave radiative cooling, stronger cooling

8 Front Passing

9 Thunderstorm Frequency Thunderstorm frequency map for the United States

10 Thunderstorms The upper part usually composes ice and is spread out as anvils. Types: 1.Short-lived cell 2.Multicell 3.Suepercell or split cell (can have hails and tornados) Short-lived cell : when shear is weak, shear < 10 ms -1 below 6 km, Multicell : moderate shear, 10 ~ 20 ms -1, Supercell : strong shear, shear > 20 ms -1. Storms propagation speed = mean wind speed + propagation due to new formation of cell.

11 Thunderstorms Life time: short-lived cell: ~ 30 min multicell: ~ 10-15 min for each cell supercell:~ nearly steady state (several hours) Storm dissipates because of: water loading, cut of energy supply, dry air entrainment, mixing, etc.

12 Thunderstorms Storm types are strongly related to the Bulk Richardson number Parameters: Bulk Richardson number ( ) (an overestimated w) Reference for what type of storms but not their severity.

13 Why CAPE? Need energy to develop a storm (no help from large scales, like upper level trough to winter storms) Thunderstorms Why shear? 1.The ability of a gust front to trigger a new cell (for multicell) 2.The ability of an updraft to interact with environment wind shear to produce an enhanced quasi-steady storm structure. (supercell)

14 Shear and Storm Types

15 Supercell Isolated convetive storms (life time - several hours) Usually requires large CAPE and strong wind shear Low level moist, upper level dry ( - strong downdraft) Shear too strong is not good either (destroy the storm structure) Can potentially produce tornados

16 Supercell

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19 Shear and Storm Splitting Uni-directional shear Multi-directional shear

20 Shear and Storm Moving Uni-directional shear Multi-directional shear

21 Supercell

22 Note: The wind vectors in the middle latitude of the northern hemisphere usually turn clockwise with height (Coriolis force effect). So, usually the split right-moving storm survives.

23 Supercell

24 Anticyclonic circulation Cyclonic circulation Survival Uni-directional shear Multi-directional shear

25 Storms and Floods For multicell and supercell, if the system is quasi-stationary or slowly moving,  Produce heavy rainfall  Flashflood can occur


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