unit 10 Flashcards

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1
Q

Jet streams

A

fast flowing upper-level air current; near tropopause

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2
Q

Polar Jet stream

A

found between large boundaries if war and cold air in midlatitudes
-the bigger in radiation and temperature differences and bigger density and pressure differences

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3
Q

jet streams meander

A

ridges (pushing jet stream to the north) and troughs (digging jet streams towards the south)

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4
Q

Midlatitude cyclone

A
  • Surface low pressure system
  • central pressure near 990-1000 mb
  • Jet streams usually responsible for formation
  • exists between 35-70 latitude
  • roughly 1600 km in size
  • converging counterclockwise circulation (northern hemisphere)
  • rising motion
  • circulation creates fronts
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5
Q

LIFE CYCLE OF MIDLATITUDE CYCLONES

A

a) stationary front : separating cold air mass and warm air mass; beginning of the formation of the surface low due to divergence aloft
b) wave stage: winds begin to circulate around the center of low pressure
- open wave stage: during this stage the system has well defined fronts; cold front forms and warm front; heavy precipitation on cold front, light precipitation on warm front, center has precipitation; warm sector between warm and cold front
- occlusion stage: eventually, the surging cold front will catch up with the warm front
- warm air begins lifting from the surface as the cold “dense” air forces it upwards
- occluded front created
- cyclone starts to weaken or “dissipate”
- dissipating stage: once the storm has elevated all warm air

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6
Q

MIDLATITUDE ANTICYCLONES

A
  • surface high pressure system
  • upper level convergence due to jet streams
  • diverging clockwise circulation
  • sinking motion
  • no fronts
  • moves slower than cyclones
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7
Q

WHAT IS A TROPICAL CYCLONE

A
  • a surface low pressure system
  • thrive off warm waters
  • typically, between 5N and 25N
  • don’t form towards the equator because there is no Coriolis; there is a ton of warm convection but there is no spin
  • persist 3-12 days and cover large areas
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8
Q

tropical cyclone season

A

august, September, October

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9
Q

tropical cyclone formation

A
  • warm water and latent heat fuel
  • evaporation of warm water at the surface creates a moist environment
  • as warm moist air rises, condensation occurs in the upper atmosphere which release latent heat
  • leads to warm buoyant air that will continue to rise
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10
Q

types of tropical cyclones

A

-Easterly waves/tropical depressions
a) develop in the tropics
b) Strong convergence occurs near ITCZ
c)Coriolis
d)cumulus clouds and precipitation occur as cloud clusters; associated with cyclonic rotation
- as easterly wave strengthens and low pressure decreases and becomes more organized it is named a tropical depression (sustained winds between 23-38 mph)
-Tropical storms
a) sustained winds are between 39-73 mph
-Hurricanes
a) tightly organized low pressure system; winds greater than 74 mph; warm core systems; can produce tornados
Hurricanes
-wind speeds are high because of very low pressure
-Saffir Simpson scale

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11
Q

Eyewall

A

towering ring of cumulonimbus clouds that surround the eye; rapid rising motion from outside the eye fuels the storms (strongest winds and heaviest storms)

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12
Q

eye

A

located in the center of a hurricane; generally calm/clear conditions (light winds and rain); sinking motion because pressure rises before gets to center

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13
Q

rainbands

A

convective bands of heavy precipitation that spirals inward toward the center of the storm

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14
Q

Storm surge

A

an abnormal rise of water generated by a storm over and above the predicted tides

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15
Q

Storm tide

A

The water level rises due to the combination of storm surge and astronomical tide

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16
Q

Reason for storm surge/tide

A

water is pushing against the coastline by winds

-pressure; low pressure=less weight causing the water to bubble up

17
Q

WHAT CAUSES HURRICANES TO FALL APART?

A
  • make them go into cold ocean
  • landfall because there is no warm water
  • sheer; chaotic winds in atmosphere rips hurricane to shreds
18
Q

similarities

A
  • surface low pressure systems
  • rising motion/precipitation
  • synoptic systems: large scale
  • both spin counterclockwise with cumulonimbus clouds
19
Q

differences

A
  • forming mechanisms
  • tropical cyclones do not have fronts
  • tropical cyclone typically have lower central pressures
  • tropical cyclones have higher wind speeds
  • Sandy converged with midlatitude cyclone (Post tropical cyclone)
20
Q

(top)Divergence

A

uplift, low convergence;To the east of the upper level trough axis winds speed up and spread far apart (divergence)
-creates surface low pressure; air rises

21
Q

(top)Convergence

A

Subsidence. High divergence; -As upper level winds approach an upper level through axis from the west , the winds slow down and come together
-creates surface high pressure; air subsides

22
Q

relationships to cyclones

A

Anticyclone follows a cyclone

• Anticyclones typically reside behind cyclone’s cold front