midlatitude cyclones
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Author(s):  
Peyton K. Capute ◽  
Ryan D. Torn

AbstractArctic cyclones (ACs) are synoptic scale features that can be associated with strong, intense winds over the Arctic region for long periods of time, potentially leading to rapid declines of sea ice during the summer. As a consequence, sea ice predictions may rely on the predictability of cyclone-related wind speed and direction, which critically depends on the cyclone track and intensity. Despite this, there are relatively few studies that have documented the predictability of ACs during the summer, beyond a few case studies, nor has there been an extensive comparison of whether these cyclones are more or less predictable relative to comparable midlatitude cyclones, which have been studied in greater detail. The goal of this study is to document the practical predictability of AC position and intensity forecasts over 100 cases and compare it to 89 Atlantic basin midlatitude cyclones using the Global Ensemble Forecast System (GEFS) Reforecast V2. This dataset contains 11-member ensemble forecasts initialized daily from 1985-present using a fixed model. In this study, 1 and 3 day forecast hours are compared, where predictability is defined as the ensemble mean root mean square error and ensemble standard deviation (SD). Although Atlantic basin cyclone tracks are characterized by higher predictability relative to comparable ACs, intensity predictability is higher for ACs. In addition, storms characterized by low ensemble SD and predictability are found in regions of higher baroclinic instability than storms characterized by high predictability. There appears to be little, if any, relationship between latent heat release and precipitable water and predictability.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sonja Murto ◽  
Rodrigo Caballero ◽  
Gunilla Svensson ◽  
Lukas Papritz

Abstract. Atmospheric blocking can influence Arctic weather by diverting the mean westerly flow polewards, bringing warm, moist air to high latitudes. Recent studies have shown that diabatic heating processes in the ascending warm conveyor belt branch of extratropical cyclones are relevant to blocking dynamics. This leads to the question of the extent to which diabatic heating associated with midlatitude cyclones may influence high-latitude blocking and drive Arctic warm events. In this study we investigate the dynamics behind 50 extreme warm events of wintertime high Arctic temperature anomalies. Classifying the warm events based on blocking occurrence within three selected sectors, we find that 30 of these events are associated with a block over the Urals, featuring negative upper-level PV anomalies over central Siberia north of the Ural Mountains. Lagrangian back-trajectory calculations show that almost 60 % of the air parcels making up these negative PV anomalies experience lifting and diabatic heating (median 11 K) in the six days prior to the block. Further, almost 70 % of the heated trajectories undergo maximum heating in a compact region of the midlatitude North Atlantic, temporally taking place between six and one days before arriving in the blocking region. We also find anomalously high cyclone activity (on average five cyclones within this five-day heating window) within a sector northwest of the main heating domain. In addition, 10 of the 50 warm events are associated with blocking over Scandinavia; the contribution of diabatic heating to these blocks is again around 60 % for six-day back-trajectories, of which 60 % undergo maximum heating over the North Atlantic but generally closer to the time of arrival in the block and further upstream relative to heated trajectories associated with Ural blocking. This study highlights the role of diabatic heating in high-latitude blocking dynamics and the importance of the interaction between midlatitude cyclones and Eurasian blocking as driver for Arctic warm extremes.


Author(s):  
Alexander J. Baker ◽  
Kevin I. Hodges ◽  
Reinhard K. H. Schiemann ◽  
Pier Luigi Vidale

2020 ◽  
Vol 148 (11) ◽  
pp. 4479-4495
Author(s):  
Melissa L. Breeden ◽  
Ryan Clare ◽  
Jonathan E. Martin ◽  
Ankur R. Desai

AbstractPrevious research has found a relationship between the equatorward extent of snow cover and low-level baroclinicity, suggesting a link between the development and trajectory of midlatitude cyclones and the extent of preexisting snow cover. Midlatitude cyclones are more frequent 50–350 km south of the snow boundary, coincident with weak maxima in the environmental Eady growth rate. The snow line is projected to recede poleward with increasing greenhouse gas emissions, possibly affecting the development and track of midlatitude cyclones during Northern Hemisphere winter. Detailed examination of the physical implications of a modified snow boundary on the life cycle of individual storms has, to date, not been undertaken. This study investigates the impact of a receding snow boundary on two cyclogenesis events using Weather Research and Forecasting Model simulations initialized with observed and projected future changes to snow extent as a surface boundary condition. Potential vorticity diagnosis of the modified cyclone simulations isolates how changes in surface temperature, static stability, and relative vorticity arising from the altered boundary affect the developing cyclone. We find that the surface warm anomaly associated with snow removal lowered heights near the center of the two cyclones investigated, strengthening their cyclonic circulation. However, the direct effect of snow removal is mitigated by the stability response and an indirect relative vorticity response to snow removal. Because of these opposing effects, it is suggested that the immediate effect of receding snow cover on midlatitude cyclones is likely minimal and depends on the stage of the cyclone life cycle.


2020 ◽  
Vol 33 (13) ◽  
pp. 5635-5649 ◽  
Author(s):  
Acacia Pepler ◽  
Andrew Dowdy

AbstractCyclones can be identified from gridded pressure data at different levels of the troposphere, with vertical structure known to influence the temporal development and impacts of midlatitude cyclones. However, studies of midlatitude cyclones typically focus on cyclones identified at a single atmospheric level. This paper examines how the frequency of vertically organized or deep cyclones varies around the world, with a focus on southeastern Australia. About 50% of global cyclones identified from mean sea level pressure show a coherent vertical structure extending to at least 500 hPa, based on ERA-Interim reanalysis data, and shallow cyclones are most common in the global midlatitudes. Using a combination of reanalysis data and satellite-based rainfall and lightning, we show that in southeast Australia deep cyclones have higher intensities, longer durations, and more severe winds and rainfall than either shallow surface cyclones or upper-level cyclones with no surface low, motivating a three-dimensional approach for future cyclone analyses.


2019 ◽  
Vol 76 (6) ◽  
pp. 1521-1546 ◽  
Author(s):  
Joseph P. Zagrodnik ◽  
Lynn A. McMurdie ◽  
Robert A. Houze ◽  
Simone Tanelli

Abstract As midlatitude cyclones pass over a coastal mountain range, the processes producing their clouds and precipitation are modified, leading to considerable spatial variability in precipitation amount and composition. Statistical diagrams of airborne precipitation radar transects, surface precipitation measurements, and particle size distributions are examined from nine cases observed during the Olympic Mountains Experiment (OLYMPEX). Although the pattern of windward enhancement and leeside diminishment of precipitation was omnipresent, the degree of modulation was largely controlled by the synoptic environment associated with the prefrontal, warm, and postfrontal sectors of midlatitude cyclones. Prefrontal sectors contained homogeneous stratiform precipitation with a slightly enhanced ice layer on the windward slopes and rapid diminishment to a near-complete rain shadow in the lee. Warm sectors contained deep, intense enhancement over both the windward slopes and high terrain and less prominent rain shadows owing to downstream spillover of ice particles generated over terrain. Surface particle size distributions in the warm sector contained a broad spectrum of sizes and concentrations of raindrops on the lower windward side where high precipitation rates were achieved from varying degrees of both liquid and ice precipitation-generating processes. Spillover precipitation was rather homogeneous in nature and lacked the undulations in particle size and concentration that occurred at the windward sites. Postfrontal precipitation transitioned from isolated convective cells over ocean to a shallow, mixed convective–stratiform composition with broader coverage and greater precipitation rates over the sloping terrain.


2018 ◽  
Vol 75 (8) ◽  
pp. 2763-2785 ◽  
Author(s):  
Hannah C. Barnes ◽  
Joseph P. Zagrodnik ◽  
Lynn A. McMurdie ◽  
Angela K. Rowe ◽  
Robert A. Houze

Abstract This study examines Kelvin–Helmholtz (KH) waves observed by dual-polarization radar in several precipitating midlatitude cyclones during the Olympic Mountains Experiment (OLYMPEX) field campaign along the windward side of the Olympic Mountains in Washington State and in a strong stationary frontal zone in Iowa during the Iowa Flood Studies (IFloodS) field campaign. While KH waves develop regardless of the presence or absence of mountainous terrain, this study indicates that the large-scale flow can be modified when encountering a mountain range in such a way as to promote development of KH waves on the windward side and to alter their physical structure (i.e., orientation and amplitude). OLYMPEX sampled numerous instances of KH waves in precipitating clouds, and this study examines their effects on microphysical processes above, near, and below the melting layer. The dual-polarization radar data indicate that KH waves above the melting layer promote aggregation. KH waves centered in the melting layer produce the most notable signatures in dual-polarization variables, with the patterns suggesting that the KH waves promote both riming and aggregation. Both above and near the melting layer ice particles show no preferred orientation likely because of tumbling in turbulent air motions. KH waves below the melting layer facilitate the generation of large drops via coalescence and/or vapor deposition, increasing mean drop size and rain rate by only slight amounts in the OLYMPEX storms.


2018 ◽  
Vol 45 (6) ◽  
pp. 2833-2841 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sophia A. K. Schäfer ◽  
Aiko Voigt
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