fronts and mid-latitude cyclones

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Fronts and Mid- latitude Cyclones

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Page 1: Fronts and Mid-latitude Cyclones

Fronts and Mid-latitude Cyclones

Page 2: Fronts and Mid-latitude Cyclones

FrontsThe boundary between two different air masses is called a front.It is a region of significant horizontal gradients in temperature or humidity.Typically 100 to 200 km wide – very sharp transitions are uncommon.

Fronts are a dominant feature of mid-latitudes. In particular fronts associated with low pressure systems (mid-latitude cyclones, extra-tropical cyclones, depressions).The movement of fronts is responsible for much of the day-to-day variability in weather conditions. Northwest Europe receives many different air mass types, with frequent frontal passages – results in very variable weather.

Page 3: Fronts and Mid-latitude Cyclones

Warm Frontwarm air

cool air

movementof front

cool air

warm airnimbo-stratus

alto-stratuscirro-stratus

cirrus

~300 km ~500 km

• Warm air flows up over denser cold air

• Inclination of frontal surface is very shallow: 0.5 to 1

• Approach of front signalled by high cirrus or cirrostratus, cloud base lowering as surface front approaches.

• Rain starts ahead of surface front, is widespread and persistent

• Skies clear quickly after passage of surface front

~10

km

Page 4: Fronts and Mid-latitude Cyclones

Cumulo-nimbus

Cold Frontcold air

warm air

movementof front

cold airwarm air

~70 km ~200 km

• Dense cold air pushes forward into warmer air, which is forced upward

• Steeper than warm front: ~2• Deep convective clouds form above

surface front, heavy rain in narrow band along surface front

• Behind front cloud base lifts, eventually clearing

• Near the surface the cold air may surge forward, producing

a very steep frontal zone

~10

km

Page 5: Fronts and Mid-latitude Cyclones

Stationary Fronts• There is no fundamental difference

between the air masses either side of warm and cold fronts – the front is defined by the direction of motion

• When the boundary between air masses does not move it is called a stationary front

• Note that the wind speed is not zero – the air individual masses still move, but the boundary between them does not

cold air

warm air

Page 6: Fronts and Mid-latitude Cyclones

Occluded Fronts

movementof front

• In general cold fronts move faster than warm fronts, and may thus catch up with a warm front ahead – the result is an occluded front

• There are two types of occluded fronts: warm and cold, depending on whether the air behind the cold front is warmer or cooler than the air ahead of the warm front

• Cold occlusions are the more common type in the UK

• Occlusion is part of the cycle of frontal development and decay within mid-latitude low pressure systems

Page 7: Fronts and Mid-latitude Cyclones

cold air

warm air

cool air

Warm Occlusion• In both warm and cold occlusions,

the wedge of warm air is associated with layered clouds, and frequently with precipitation

• Precipitation can be heavy if warm moist air is forced up rapidly by the occlusion

Page 8: Fronts and Mid-latitude Cyclones

cold air

warm air

cool air

Cold Occlusion

Page 9: Fronts and Mid-latitude Cyclones

Mid-latitude Cyclones• Low pressure systems are a

characteristic feature of mid-latitude temperate zones

• They form in well defined zones associated with the polar front – which provides a strong temperature gradient – and convergent flow resulting from the global circulation

31-08-2000

Page 10: Fronts and Mid-latitude Cyclones

• Low pressure forms at surface over polar front due to divergence aloft

• As rotation around initial low starts, a ‘wave’ develops on the polar front

• Mass balance: inward flow compensated by large-scale lifting cooling cloud formation

cloud

Page 11: Fronts and Mid-latitude Cyclones

• Surface low is maintained (or deepens) due to divergence aloft exceeding convergence at surface

• Flow is super-geostrophic: cold sector air pushes cold front forward; warm sector air flows up warm front – warm front moves slower than cold

• Cold front overtakes warm front to form an occlusion, which works out from centre

• Depression usually achieves maximum intensity 12-24 hours after the start of occlusion

Page 12: Fronts and Mid-latitude Cyclones

• Low starts to weaken as inflowing air ‘fills up’ the low pressure

• Low continues to weaken, clouds break up

Page 13: Fronts and Mid-latitude Cyclones
Page 14: Fronts and Mid-latitude Cyclones

A

BA

B

Page 15: Fronts and Mid-latitude Cyclones

A

BA

B

Page 16: Fronts and Mid-latitude Cyclones
Page 17: Fronts and Mid-latitude Cyclones

Ana-Fronts• Air is rising with respect to both

frontal surfaces• Clouds are multi-layered and

deep, extending throughout the troposphere

tropopause

cold

warm

cold

Page 18: Fronts and Mid-latitude Cyclones

Kata-Fronts

tropopause

Sc Sc

subsidence inversion

• Air aloft in the warm sector is sinking relative to the fronts

• Restricts formation of medium & high-level clouds. Frontal cloud is mainly thick stratocumulus, it’s depth limited by the subsidence inversion

• Precipitation is mostly light rain or drizzle.

cold

warm

cold

Page 19: Fronts and Mid-latitude Cyclones

Ana-cold fronts may occur with kata-warm fronts, and vice-versa.Forecasting the extent of rain associated with fronts is complicated

– Most fronts are not ana- or kata- along whole length, or at all levels within the troposphere

Page 20: Fronts and Mid-latitude Cyclones

upper wind

A

B

C

D

Page 21: Fronts and Mid-latitude Cyclones

30°

60°

Polar Front

Mid-latitudeJet Stream

Tropicaljet

Page 22: Fronts and Mid-latitude Cyclones

30

60

80

Major Frontal Zones Northern Hemisphere Winter

Atlantic Polar Front

Pacific Polar Front

CanadianArctic Front

Atlantic/AsiaticArctic Front

MediterraneanFront