Weather front
A weather front is a boundary in between two masses of air of different densities and is the principal cause of significant weather. In surface weather analyses, fronts are depicted using various colored lines and symbols. The air masses separated by a front usually differ in temperature and humidity. Cold fronts may feature narrow bands of thunderstorms and severe weather, and may on occasion be preceded by squall lines or dry lines. Warm fronts are usually preceded by stratiform precipitation and fog. The weather usually quickly clears after a front passes. Some fronts produce no precipitation and little cloudiness, although there is invariably a wind shift.
Cold and occluded fronts generally move from west to east, while warm fronts move poleward. Because of the greater density of air in their wake, cold fronts and cold occlusions move faster than warm fronts and warm occlusions. Mountains and warm bodies of water can slow the movement of fronts. When a front becomes stationary, and the density contrast across the frontal boundary vanishes, the front can degenerate into a line which separates regions of differing wind velocity, known as a shearline. This is most common over the open ocean.
Surface weather analysis
A surface weather analysis is a special type of weather map which provides a view of weather elements over a geographical area at a specified time based on information from ground based weather stations.[1] Weather maps are created by plotting or tracing the values of relevant quantities such as sea level pressure, temperature, and cloud cover onto a geographical map to help find synoptic scale features such as weather fronts. Surface weather analyses have special symbols which show frontal systems, cloud cover, precipitation, or other important information. For example, an H may represent high pressure, implying good and fair weather. An L on the other hand may represent low pressure, which frequently accompanies precipitation. Various symbols are used not just for frontal zones and other surface boundaries on weather maps, but also to depict the present weather at various locations on the weather map. Areas of precipitation help determine the frontal type and location.[1]
Cold front
A cold front's location is at the leading edge of the temperature drop off, which in an isotherm analysis would show up as the leading edge of the isotherm gradient, and it normally lies within a sharp surface trough. Cold fronts can move up to twice as fast and produce sharper changes in weather than warm fronts, since cold air is denser than warm air and rapidly replaces the warm air preceding the boundary. Cold fronts are typically accompanied by a narrow band of showers and thunderstorms. On weather maps, the surface position of the cold front is marked with the symbol of a blue line of triangles/spikes (pips) pointing in the direction of travel, and it is placed at the leading edge of the cooler air mass.[2]
Fronts are the boundaries between air masses of different temperature. If warm air is moving toward cold air, it is a “warm front”. These are shown on weather maps as a red line with scallops on it. If cold air is moving toward warm air, then it is a “cold front”. Cold fronts are always shown as a blue line with arrow points on it. If neither air mass is moving very much, it is called a “stationary front”, shown as an alternating red and blue line. Usually, a cold front will be associated with a warm front, with a low pressure center, connecting them (see above). This frontal "system" can be thought of as separating a cold air mass from a warm air mass, and the two different types of fronts simply indicate which direction those portions of the different air masses are moving.
Warm front
Warm fronts are at the leading edge of the temperature rise, which is located on the equator-ward edge of the gradient in isotherms, and lie within broader troughs of low pressure than cold fronts. A warm front moves more slowly than the cold front which usually follows because cold air is more dense and harder to remove from the earth's surface. This also forces temperature differences across warm fronts to be broader in scale. Clouds ahead of the warm front are mostly stratiform, and rainfall gradually increases as the front approaches. Fog can also occur preceding a warm frontal passage. Clearing and warming is usually rapid after frontal passage. If the warm air mass is unstable, thunderstorms may be embedded among the stratiform clouds ahead of the front, and after frontal passage thundershowers may continue. On weather maps, the surface location of a warm front is marked with a red line of half circles pointing in the direction of travel.[2]
Occluded front
An occluded front is formed when a cold front overtakes a warm front.[3] The cold and warm fronts curve naturally poleward into the point of occlusion, which is also known as the triple point.[4] It lies within a sharp trough, but the air mass behind the boundary can be either warm or cold. In a cold occlusion, the air mass overtaking the warm front is cooler than the cool air ahead of the warm front and plows under both air masses. In a warm occlusion, the air mass overtaking the warm front is warmer than the cold air ahead of the warm front and rides over the colder air mass while lifting the warm air.
A wide variety of weather can be found along an occluded front, with thunderstorms possible, but usually their passage is associated with a drying of the air mass. Occluded fronts are indicated on a weather map by a purple line with alternating half-circles and triangles pointing in direction of travel.[2] Occluded fronts usually form around mature low-pressure areas.[2]
Movement
Fronts are generally guided by winds aloft, but they normally move at lesser speeds. Cold fronts and occluded fronts in the Northern Hemisphere usually travel from the northwest to southeast, while warm fronts move more poleward with time. In the Northern Hemisphere a warm front moves from southwest to northeast. In the Southern Hemisphere, the reverse is true; the cold front usually moves from the southwest to the northeast, and the warm front moves from northwest to southeast. Movement is largely caused by the pressure gradient force (horizontal differences in atmospheric pressure) and the Coriolis effect, which is caused by Earth's spinning about its axis. Frontal zones can be slowed down by geographic features like mountains and large bodies of warm water.[2]
Stationary front and shearline
A stationary front is a non-moving boundary between two air masses, neither of which is strong enough to replace the other. They tend to remain essentially in the same area for extended periods of time, usually moving in waves.[5] There is normally a broad temperature gradient behind the boundary with more widely spaced isotherm packing.
A wide variety of weather can be found along a stationary front, but usually clouds and prolonged precipitation are found there. Stationary fronts either dissipate after several days or devolve into shear lines, but they can change into a cold or warm front if conditions aloft change. Stationary fronts are marked on weather maps with alternating red half-circles and blue spikes pointing in opposite directions, indicating no significant movement.
When stationary fronts become smaller in scale, degenerating to a narrow zone where wind direction changes significantly over a relatively short distance, they become known as shear lines.[6] A shear line is depicted as a line of red dots and dashes.[2]
Precipitation produced
Fronts are the principal cause of significant weather. Convective precipitation (showers, thundershowers and related unstable weather) is caused by air being lifted and condensing into clouds by the movement of the cold front or cold occlusion under a mass of warmer, moist air. If the temperature differences of the two air masses involved are large and the turbulence is extreme because of wind shear and the presence of a jet max, "roll clouds" and tornadoes may occur. [7]
In the warm season, lee troughs, breezes, outflow boundaries, and trowals/occlusions can lead to convection if enough moisture is available. Orographic precipitation is precipitation created through the lifting action of air moving over terrain such as mountains and hills, which is most common behind cold fronts that move into mountainous areas. It may sometimes occur in advance of warm fronts moving northward to the east of mountainous terrain. But precipitation along warm fronts is relatively steady, as in rain or drizzle. Fog, sometimes extensive and dense, often occurs in pre-warm-frontal areas.[8] But not all fronts produce precipitation or even clouds: moisture must be present in the air mass which is being lifted.[9]
Dry line
A similar phenomenon to a frontal zone is the dry line, which is the boundary between air masses with significant moisture differences. When westerly winds aloft increase on the north side of surface highs, areas of lowered pressure will form downwind of north-south oriented mountain chains, leading to the formation of a lee trough. Near the surface during daylight hours, warm moist air is more dense than dry air of greater temperature, and thus the warm moist air wedges under the drier air like a cold front. At higher altitudes, the warm moist air is less dense than the dry air and the boundary slope reverses. In the vicinity of the reversal aloft, severe weather is possible, especially when a triple point is formed with a cold front.[10] A weaker form of the dry line seen more commonly is the lee trough, which displays weaker differences in moisture. When moisture pools along the boundary during the warm season, it can be the focus of diurnal thunderstorms.[11]
The dry line may occur anywhere on earth in regions intermediate between desert areas and warm seas. The southern plains west of the Mississippi River in the U.S. are a particularly favored location. The dry line normally moves eastward during the day and westward at night. A dry line is depicted on National Weather Service (NWS) surface analyses as a brown line with scallops facing into the moist sector. Dry lines are one of the few surface fronts where the pips indicated do not necessarily reflect the direction of motion.[12]
Squall line
Organized areas of thunderstorm activity not only reinforce pre-existing frontal zones, but can outrun cold fronts in a pattern where the upper level jet splits into two streams, with the resultant Mesoscale Convective System (MCS) forming at the point of the upper level split in the wind pattern running southeast into the warm sector parallel to low-level thickness lines. When the convection is strong and linear or curved, the MCS is called a squall line, with the feature placed at the leading edge of the significant wind shift and pressure rise.[13] Even weaker and less organized areas of thunderstorms lead to locally cooler air and higher pressures, and outflow boundaries exist ahead of this type of activity, which can act as foci for additional thunderstorm activity later in the day.[14]
These features are often depicted in the warm season across the United States on surface analyses and lie within surface troughs. If outflow boundaries or squall lines form over arid regions, a haboob may result.[15] Squall lines are depicted on NWS surface analyses as an alternating pattern of two red dots and a dash labelled SQLN or SQUALL LINE, while outflow boundaries are depicted as troughs with a label of OUTFLOW BNDRY.
Tropical waves
Atlantic tropical waves develop from disturbances which drift off the continent of Africa onto the Atlantic Ocean. They are generated or enhanced by the African Easterly Jet. The clockwise circulation of the large transoceanic high-pressure cell or anticyclone centered near the Azores islands moves easterly waves away from the coastal areas of Africa towards North America. Tropical waves cause approximately 60% of Atlantic tropical cyclones and 85% of intense Atlantic hurricanes (Category 3 and greater).[16][17]
Tropical cyclones sometimes degenerate back into a tropical wave. This normally occurs if upper-level wind shear is too strong. The storm can redevelop if the upper level shear abates. If a tropical wave is moving quickly, it can have strong winds of over tropical storm force but is not considered a tropical storm unless it has a closed circulation. An example of this was Hurricane Claudette (2003), where the original wave had winds of 45 mph (72 km/h) before developing a circulation. Tropical waves are depicted with a solid orange line on the U.S. National Weather Service Unified Surface Analysis.[2]
See also
References
- ^ a b Air Apparent: How Meteorologists Learned to Map, Predict, and Dramatize Weather. University of Chicago Press. Chicago: 1999.
- ^ a b c d e f g David Roth. Hydrometeorological Prediction Center. Unified Surface Analysis Manual. Retrieved on 2006-10-22.
- ^ University of Illinois. Occluded Front. Retrieved on 2006-10-22.
- ^ National Weather Service Office, Norman, Oklahoma. Triple Point. Retrieved on 2006-10-22.
- ^ University of Illinois. Stationary Front. Retrieved on 2006-10-22.
- ^ Glossary of Meteorology. Shear Line. Retrieved on 2006-10-22.
- ^ Glossary of Meteorology. Convection. Retrieved on 2006-10-22.
- ^ Glossary of Meteorology. Orographic Lifting. Retrieved on 2006-10-22.
- ^ University of New Hampshire. STEC 521: Lesson 7 "Clouds and Precipitation" Retrieved on 2007-04-29.
- ^ Huaqing Cai. Dryline cross section. Retrieved on 2006-12-05.
- ^ Glossary of Meteorology. Lee Trough. Retrieved on 2006-10-22.
- ^ University of Illinois. Dry Line: A Moisture Boundary. Retrieved on 2006-10-22.
- ^ Office of the Federal Coordinator for Meteorology. Chapter 2: Definitions. Retrieved on 2006-10-22.
- ^ Michael Branick. National Weather Service Office, Norman, Oklahoma. A Comprehensive Glossary of Weather. Retrieved on 2006-10-22.
- ^ Western Region Climate Center. H. Retrieved on 2006-10-22.
- ^ Atlantic Oceanographic and Meteorological Laboratory, Hurricane Research Division. "Frequently Asked Questions: What is an easterly wave?". NOAA. Retrieved 2006-07-25.
- ^ Avila, Lixion (1995). "Atlantic tropical systems of 1993" (PDF). Monthly Weather Review. 123 (3): 887–896. Retrieved 2006-07-25.
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