atmo 336 weather, climate and society surface and upper-air maps

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ATMO 336 Weather, Climate and Society Surface and Upper-Air Maps

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ATMO 336 Weather, Climate and Society Surface and Upper-Air Maps. N. Pacific Pressure Analysis (isobars every 4 mb). 2000 km. Pressure varies by 1 mb per 100 km horizontally or 0.0001 mb per 10 m. Review: Pressure-Height. Remember… - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: ATMO 336 Weather, Climate and Society Surface and Upper-Air Maps

ATMO 336

Weather, Climate and SocietySurface and Upper-Air Maps

Page 2: ATMO 336 Weather, Climate and Society Surface and Upper-Air Maps

N. Pacific Pressure Analysis (isobars every 4 mb)

Pressure varies by 1 mb per 100 km horizontally or 0.0001 mb per 10 m

2000 km

Page 3: ATMO 336 Weather, Climate and Society Surface and Upper-Air Maps

Review: Pressure-HeightRemember…Pressure falls very rapidly with height near sea-level 3,000 m 701 mb2,500 m 747 mb2,000 m 795 mb1,500 m 846 mb1,000 m 899 mb500 m 955 mb0 m 1013 mb

1 mb per 10 m height

Consequently………. Vertical pressure changes from differences in station elevation dominate horizontal changes

Page 4: ATMO 336 Weather, Climate and Society Surface and Upper-Air Maps

Station Pressure

Pressure is recorded at stations with different altitudesStation pressure differences reflect altitude differences Wind is forced by horizontal pressure differences Since horizontal pressure variations are 1 mb per 100 km We must adjust station pressures to one standard level:

Mean Sea Level

Ahrens, Fig. 6.7

Page 5: ATMO 336 Weather, Climate and Society Surface and Upper-Air Maps

Reduction to Sea-Level-Pressure

Station pressures are adjusted to Sea Level PressureSea Level Pressure Make altitude correction of 1 mb per 10 m elevation

Ahrens, Fig. 6.7

Page 6: ATMO 336 Weather, Climate and Society Surface and Upper-Air Maps

Summary

• Because horizontal pressure differences are the force that drives the wind

Station pressures are adjusted to one standard level…Mean Sea Level…to remove the dominating impact of different elevations on pressure change

Page 7: ATMO 336 Weather, Climate and Society Surface and Upper-Air Maps

Correction for TucsonElevation of Tucson AZ is ~800 m

Station pressure at Tucson runs ~930 mb

So SLP for Tucson would be

SLP = 930 mb + (1 mb / 10 m) x 800 m

SLP = 930 mb + 80 mb = 1010 mb

Page 8: ATMO 336 Weather, Climate and Society Surface and Upper-Air Maps

Correction for DenverElevation of Denver CO is ~1600 m

Station pressure at Denver runs ~850 mb

So SLP for Denver would be

SLP = 850 mb + (1 mb / 10 m) x 1600 m

SLP = 850 mb + 160 mb = 1010 mb

Actual pressure corrections take into account temperature and pressure-height variations, but 1 mb / 10 m is a good approximation

Page 9: ATMO 336 Weather, Climate and Society Surface and Upper-Air Maps

Lets Try for PhoenixElevation of Phoenix AZ is ~340 m

Assume station pressure at PHX is ~977 mb

What would the SLP for PHX be?

Page 10: ATMO 336 Weather, Climate and Society Surface and Upper-Air Maps

Correction for PhoenixElevation of PHX Airport is ~340 m

Station pressure at PHX is ~977 mb

So, SLP for PHX would be

SLP = 977 mb + (1 mb / 10 m) x 340 m

SLP = 977 mb + 34 mb = 1011 mb

Page 11: ATMO 336 Weather, Climate and Society Surface and Upper-Air Maps

Local ExampleStation pressure at PHX is ~977 mb.

Station pressure at TUS is ~932 mb.

Which station has that higher SLP?

Page 12: ATMO 336 Weather, Climate and Society Surface and Upper-Air Maps

Correction for TucsonElevation of TUS Airport is ~800 m

Station pressure at TUS was ~932 mb

So, SLP for TUS would be

SLP = 932 mb + (1 mb / 10 m) x 800 m

SLP = 932 mb + 80 mb = 1012 mb

PHX (prior slide) has SLP = 1011 mb

Thus, the SLP was higher in TUS than PHX

Page 13: ATMO 336 Weather, Climate and Society Surface and Upper-Air Maps

Sea Level Pressure Values

Ahrens, Fig. 6.3

(October, 2005)Wilma

882 mb (26.04 in.)

Page 14: ATMO 336 Weather, Climate and Society Surface and Upper-Air Maps

Summary

• Because horizontal pressure differences are the force that drives the wind

Station pressures are adjusted to one standard level…Mean Sea Level…to mitigate the impact of different elevations on pressure

Page 15: ATMO 336 Weather, Climate and Society Surface and Upper-Air Maps

Ahrens, Fig. 6.7

PGF

Page 16: ATMO 336 Weather, Climate and Society Surface and Upper-Air Maps

Surface Maps

• Pressure reduced to Mean Sea Level is plotted and analyzed for surface maps.Estimated from station pressures

• Actual surface observations for other weather elements (e.g. temperatures, dew points, winds, etc.) are plotted on surface maps.

NCEP/HPC Daily Weather MapUIUC 2010 Surface Maps

Page 17: ATMO 336 Weather, Climate and Society Surface and Upper-Air Maps

Station Plot Explanation

Winds blow from high to low pressure.

Page 18: ATMO 336 Weather, Climate and Society Surface and Upper-Air Maps

Force of Friction 1

Pressure Gradient Force

Coriolis Force

Geostrophic Wind

1004 mb

1008 mb

As the wind speed becomes slower, the Coriolis Force would also decrease.

Friction

Frictional Force is directed opposite to velocity. It acts to slow down (decelerate) the wind.

Page 19: ATMO 336 Weather, Climate and Society Surface and Upper-Air Maps

Force of Friction 1

Pressure Gradient Force

Coriolis Force

Geostrophic Wind

1004 mb

1008 mb

Geostrophic balance is no longer possible!

Friction

Coriolis force no longer can balance the larger Pressure Gradient Force, so the parcel will accelerate since the net force is not zero.

Page 20: ATMO 336 Weather, Climate and Society Surface and Upper-Air Maps

Force of Friction 2

Pressure Gradient Force

Coriolis Force

Wind

1004 mb

1008 mb

Because PGF is larger than CF, air parcel will turn toward lower pressure.

Friction Turns Wind Toward Lower Pressure.

Friction

Page 21: ATMO 336 Weather, Climate and Society Surface and Upper-Air Maps

Force of Friction 3

PGFCF

Wind1004 mb

1008 mb

Eventually, a balance among the PGF, Coriolis and Frictional Force is achieved.

PGF + CF + Friction = 0

Net force is zero, so parcel does not accelerate.

Fr

Page 22: ATMO 336 Weather, Climate and Society Surface and Upper-Air Maps

Force of Friction 4

1004 mb

1008 mb

The decrease in wind speed and deviation to lower pressure depends on surface roughness. Smooth surfaces (water) show the least slowing and turning (typically 20o-30o from geostrophic).Rough surfaces (mtns) show the most slowing and turning (typically 30o-40o from geostrophic).

MtnsWater

20o-30o

30o-40o

Page 23: ATMO 336 Weather, Climate and Society Surface and Upper-Air Maps

Force of Friction 5

1004 mb

1008 mb

Friction is important in the lowest km above sfc.Its impact gradually decreases with height. By 1-2 km, the wind is close to geostrophic or gradient wind balance.

SFC

~1 km0.6 km

0.3 km

Page 24: ATMO 336 Weather, Climate and Society Surface and Upper-Air Maps

Gedzelman, p250

Force of Friction: Ekman Spiral

Speed and direction change with height.

Wind direction turns clockwise with height in the NH.

Wind speeds increase with height.

Wind goes to the geostrophic/gradient value at ~1-2 km

Page 25: ATMO 336 Weather, Climate and Society Surface and Upper-Air Maps

Gedzelman, p249

Flow at Surface LowsLows and HighsHighs

Spirals OutwardDivergence

Spirals InwardConvergence

Page 26: ATMO 336 Weather, Climate and Society Surface and Upper-Air Maps

www.met.tamu.edu