Title: Appalachian ColdAir Damming: Climatology and Sensible Weather Impacts
1Appalachian Cold-Air DammingClimatology and
Sensible Weather Impacts
- NWS-NCSU Collaboration
- CSTAR Regional Workshop
- Thursday 16 October, 2003
2Outline
- 1.) A word about collaboration
- 2.) CAD Process Refresher and Classification
- 3.) CAD Climatology
- 4.) An Example
- 5.) Synoptic Composites
- 6.) Sensible Weather Impacts
- 7.) Hourly Trends
31.) Collaboration
- The NWS-NCSU collaboration
- Understanding and accepting the others
reality constraints, responsibilities,
priorities - Discovering and complimenting each others
strengths, helping with the others challenges - Creative thinking, flexibility, and patience
- The more you put in, the more you get back
42.) CAD Process Refresher and CAD Classification
Number of freezing rain observations September
through April 1982-1990. From Robbins and
Cortinas 1996, 15th AMS conf. on Weather Analysis
Forecasting.
5Upper-level Processes Conducive to Building
Parent High
- Confluence aloft, jet entrance
- Upper-level ridge west of parent high
Kocin and Uccellini (1990)
6CAD as a Geostrophic Adjustment Process
Mass depletion west of barrier reinforces trough
Mass accumulation creates pressure ridge
Stable atmosphere terrain impede flow, alter
force balance
7Processes Contributing to Blocking
- Adjustment process occurs with stable flow
- Blocked vs. Not Blocked? Really, degrees of
blocking - Dry adiabatic layer deeper than mountain depth
no blocking - Strong inversion intersecting mountain complete
blocking - And everything in between
- Processes that enhance stability, blocking
- Differential thermal advection (WA aloft, CA
below) - Differential evaporational cooling
- Radiational cooling and stable winter air mass
seasonality - Solar sheltering due to clouds
Bell and Bosart (1988)
8Four Processes Contributing to Pressure Rises in
CAD Ridge
- Upwind high, lee trough Adiabatic
cooling/warming, hydrostatic pressure
rises/falls enhanced when stable - Geostrophic adjustment Coriolis deflection
leads to mass accumulation on upwind side of
barrier - Along-barrier near-surface cold advection
stabilizes air east of barrier, strengthens ridge
(hydrostatically and otherwise) - ? Upslope flow on east side favors formation of
clouds, precipitation there DIABATIC PROCESSES
9Diabatic Effects on CAD
- Precipitation falling into dry air evaporational
cooling
Result increased stability, blocking pressure
rises ? Low-level wind adjusts to diabatic cool
pool northeasterly, upslope flow CA ? Clouds
shelter cold dome from solar heating, mixing ?
NWS forecasters in damming region noted different
CAD flavors variability in diabatic
contribution
10ClassicalDry synoptic forcingMay have
diabatic contributionStrong, northerly parent
high
In-Situ Diabatic processes essential High
location unfavorable Little/no CA
- Hybrid
- Equal contributions from
- dry synoptic diabatic Parent high
- Right place, too weak
- Progressive
11The Original CAD Spectrum
Classical
CAD Intensity
Hybrid
In-Situ
ltlt1
?1
gtgt1
Diabatic
Synoptic
123.) NWS/NCSU CAD Climatology Research Objectives
- Objectives
- Reproduce NWS sub-type climatology, objectively
- CAD detection algorithm
- CAD classification criteria
- Seasonal sub-type statistics
- Distinguish high-impact cases from non-events
- Upper-air patterns
- Other characteristics?
- Develop baseline climatology for sensible weather
impact
13CAD Detection Algorithm (Bailey)
- Based solely on surface station data
- Detection keys on characteristic pressure ridge,
cold dome, ageostrophic northeasterly flow
- Laplacians calculated for SLP, ? along 3
mountain-normal lines - Laplacian quantitative measure of cold dome,
ridge - Barrier-parallel line (line 4) is surrogate for
NE ageo. Flow - Thresholds set to allow detection of weaker events
14CAD Detection Algorithm Criteria
1.) Mountain-normal SLP Laplacian negative,
gt 1 standard deviation above mean negative
value 2.) Mountain-normal ? Laplacian must be gt 0
3.) SLP must be greater at center stations 4.)
Line 4 pressure ? 1.5 mb higher at RIC than GSO,
or GSO to GSP 5.) Must meet requirements for at
least 6 hours (for at least one mountain-normal
line)
15Climatological Results
Total Number of Events 353 Cold Season Events
180 Warm Season Events 173
- September - Highest frequency of events (?!!)
- July - lowest frequency of events
- Highest frequency of strong events in Winter
months - Lowest frequency of strong events in summer
months (June - August)
16Climatological Results
- 353 events identified (1984-1995)
- Original damming subtypes emerged, but...
- Many cases that did not fit the original subtypes
were also identified - Parent high too far south or too weak for
classical label, no precipitation, damming
still evident - Weak, short-lived warm-season cases not
accompanied by precipitation at onset, but
maintained in part by solar sheltering - Events in which a cyclone to the south provided
the along-barrier pressure drop - Extended CAD spectrum (perhaps broadened
definition of CAD to include cases that were
previously lookalikes)
174.) An Example CAD Sensible Weather Impact
- Period from 5-20 December 2001 very active in
terms of CAD - Examples taken from period to illustrate
challenge in forecasting sensible weather impact - Consider Eta SLP analyses at 12-h intervals from
11-18 December 2001
1812 UTC 11 December, Eta Sea-Level Pressure
Analysis
Dec. 11th, TMAX/TMIN/PRE IAD 50/38/.35 RIC
50/45/.76 ROA 47/39/.23 ORF 56/52/1.33 RDU
49/42/.71 CLT 56/42/.02 CAE 57/45/T
1900 UTC 12 December, Eta Sea-Level Pressure
Analysis
Dec. 11th, TMAX/TMIN/PRE IAD 50/38/.35 RIC
50/45/.76 ROA 47/39/.23 ORF 56/52/1.33 RDU
49/42/.71 CLT 56/42/.02 CAE 57/45/T
2
2012 UTC 12 December, Eta Sea-Level Pressure
Analysis
Dec. 12th, TMAX/TMIN/PRE IAD 50/35/.04 RIC
50/46/.01 ROA 47/45/.06 ORF 56/52/T RDU
52/49/.01 CLT 52/49/.02 CAE 55/50/.04
2
2100 UTC 13 December, Eta Sea-Level Pressure
Analysis
Dec. 12th, TMAX/TMIN/PRE IAD 50/35/.04 RIC
50/46/.01 ROA 47/45/.06 ORF 56/52/T RDU
52/49/.01 CLT 52/49/.02 CAE 55/50/.04
2
2212 UTC 13 December, Eta Sea-Level Pressure
Analysis
Dec. 13th, TMAX/TMIN/PRE IAD 56/45/.05 RIC
63/48/.01 ROA 63/45/.03 ORF 67/53/0 RDU
61/50/.01 CLT 57/51/.02 CAE 68/55/.11 RDU
Climo 54
2
2300 UTC 14 December, Eta Sea-Level Pressure
Analysis
Dec. 13th, TMAX/TMIN/PRE IAD 56/45/.05 RIC
63/48/.01 ROA 63/45/.03 ORF 67/53/0 RDU
61/50/.01 CLT 57/51/.02 CAE 68/55/.11 RDU
Climo 54
2
2412 UTC 14 December, Eta Sea-Level Pressure
Analysis
Dec. 14th, TMAX/TMIN/PRE IAD 67/53/.12 RIC
71/56/0 ROA 60/54/0 ORF 75/61/0 RDU
73/60/0 CLT 68/56/.01 CAE 73/62/0 RDU Climo
53
2
2500 UTC 15 December, Eta Sea-Level Pressure
Analysis
Dec. 14th, TMAX/TMIN/PRE IAD 67/53/.12 RIC
71/56/0 ROA 60/54/0 ORF 75/61/0 RDU
73/60/0 CLT 68/56/.01 CAE 73/62/0 RDU Climo
53
2
2612 UTC 15 December, Eta Sea-Level Pressure
Analysis
Dec. 15th, TMAX/TMIN/PRE IAD ?/31/0 RIC
?/40/0 ROA ?/39/0 ORF ?/48/0 RDU ?/42/0 CLT
?/45/0 CAE ?/47/0 RDU Climo 53
2
2700 UTC 16 December, Eta Sea-Level Pressure
Analysis
Dec. 15th, TMAX/TMIN/PRE IAD ?/31/0 RIC
?/40/0 ROA ?/39/0 ORF ?/48/0 RDU ?/42/0 CLT
?/45/0 CAE ?/47/0 RDU Climo 53
2
2812 UTC 16 December, Eta Sea-Level Pressure
Analysis
Dec. 16th, TMAX/TMIN/PRE IAD ?/26/T RIC
?/33/0 ROA ?/35/0 ORF ?/41/0 RDU ?/32/0 CLT
?/38/0 CAE ?/46/0 RDU Climo 53
2900 UTC 17 December, Eta Sea-Level Pressure
Analysis
Dec. 16th, TMAX/TMIN/PRE IAD ?/26/T RIC
?/33/0 ROA ?/35/0 ORF ?/41/0 RDU ?/32/0 CLT
?/38/0 CAE ?/46/0 RDU Climo 53
3012 UTC 17 December, Eta Sea-Level Pressure
Analysis
Dec. 17th, TMAX/TMIN/PRE IAD ?/?/.10 RIC
?/?/.32 ROA ?/?/.33 ORF ?/?/0 RDU ?/?/.39 CLT
?/?/.54 CAE ?/?/.17 RDU Climo 53
3100 UTC 18 December, Eta Sea-Level Pressure
Analysis
Dec. 17th, TMAX/TMIN/PRE IAD ?/?/.10 RIC
?/?/.32 ROA ?/?/.33 ORF ?/?/0 RDU ?/?/.39 CLT
?/?/.54 CAE ?/?/.17 RDU Climo 53
32- Now, verify your predictions for TMax at your
city - The next slide will show verification numbers
- Sum the differences for the 3 days between your
forecast and observed. If your 3-day total error
magnitude is - lt5 degrees Take the day off and go tailgate
- 5-25 degrees Stick around but feel free to
doze off at times - gt25 degrees Alright Lackmann, you didnt give
us enough information! Whats your point??
33Dec. 15th, TMAX/TMIN IAD 56/31 RIC 63/40 ROA
55/39 ORF 68/48 RDU 63/42 CLT 63/45 CAE 68/47
Dec. 16th, TMAX/TMIN IAD 46/26 RIC 51/33 ROA
51/35 ORF 48/41 RDU 57/32 CLT 57/38 CAE 60/46
Dec. 17th, TMAX/TMIN IAD 58/41 RIC 65/35 ROA
52/35 ORF 70/37 RDU 70/37 CLT 63/44 CAE 75/43
Dry Classical CAD Bark can be worse than
sensible weather bite Two events, similar SLP
patterns, very different impacts Must look
beyond the wedge (in SLP) to assess CADs
sensible weather impact!
34Effects of Cold Air Damming
- Sensible weather impacts
- Sleet, freezing rain, mixed precipitation
- Clouds, fog, and drizzle
- Visibility and ceiling height
- Below-normal temps in damming region
- adiabatic cooling, cold advection, evaporational
cooling - Or, next to nothing why?
35CAD Classification
Scheme designed with NWS consultation Key
parameters 1.) Location, strength of parent
high 2.) Presence or absence of precipitation at
CAD onset
36Classification based on location, strength of
parent high
- Classical (dry onset)
- High gt 1030 mb
- gt24 h duration
- dry onset
In-Situ
- Classical (Diab. Enh)
- High gt 1030 mb
- gt24 h duration
- precip w/in 6-h of onset
- Weak Onset
- High lt 1030
- or lt 24h duration
- dry onset
- Hybrid
- High lt 1030
- or lt 24h duration
- precip. W/in 6h of onset
- Southern Onset
- high S of 40
- dry onset
In-Situ
37The Extended CAD Spectrum
Classical (Diabatically Enhanced)
Classical (Dry Onset)
CAD Intensity
- Weak/Southern Onset
- dry onset
- high lt 1030 mb or S of 40N
- or progressive
Hybrid
- Unclassified
- solar sheltering
In-Situ
ltlt1
?1
gtgt1
Diabatic
Synoptic
38Compositing
- Composites generated for 6-day period, centered
at onset, peak, demise (defined by algorithm) - NCEP Reanalysis Wont resolve CAD, will resolve
synoptic pattern - Separated cold season (Oct 15 - Apr 15) from warm
- Separated cases by sub-type classification
- http//www4.ncsu.edu/nwsfo/storage/training/cadcl
imo/
39Classical (Diabatically Enhanced)T-48-T00
Onset-centeredT00 Peak-centeredCDEN
40Classical (Diabatically Enhanced) T-48 Onset
Centered
250-mb Geo. Ht., Isotachs
500-mb Geo. Ht, Anomalies
H
850-mb Geo. Ht., RH
SLP, anomalies
41Classical (Diabatically Enhanced) T-36 Onset
Centered
250-mb Geo. Ht., Isotachs
500-mb Geo. Ht, Anomalies
850-mb Geo. Ht., RH
SLP, anomalies
42Classical (Diabatically Enhanced) T-24 Onset
Centered
250-mb Geo. Ht., Isotachs
500-mb Geo. Ht, Anomalies
850-mb Geo. Ht., RH
SLP, anomalies
43Classical (Diabatically Enhanced) T-12 Onset
Centered
250-mb Geo. Ht., Isotachs
500-mb Geo. Ht, Anomalies
850-mb Geo. Ht., RH
SLP, anomalies
44Classical (Diabatically Enhanced) T00 Onset
Centered
250-mb Geo. Ht., Isotachs
500-mb Geo. Ht, Anomalies
850-mb Geo. Ht., RH
SLP, anomalies
45Classical (Diabatically Enhanced) T00 Peak
Centered
250-mb Geo. Ht., Isotachs
500-mb Geo. Ht, Anomalies
850-mb Geo. Ht., RH
SLP, anomalies
46Classical (Dry Onset)T-48-T00 Onset-centeredT00
Peak-centeredCDRY
47Classical (Dry Onset) T-48 Onset Centered
250-mb Geo. Ht., Isotachs
500-mb Geo. Ht, Anomalies
850-mb Geo. Ht., RH
SLP, anomalies
48Classical (Dry Onset) T-36 Onset Centered
250-mb Geo. Ht., Isotachs
500-mb Geo. Ht, Anomalies
850-mb Geo. Ht., RH
SLP, anomalies
49Classical (Dry Onset) T-24 Onset Centered
250-mb Geo. Ht., Isotachs
500-mb Geo. Ht, Anomalies
850-mb Geo. Ht., RH
SLP, anomalies
50Classical (Dry Onset) T-12 Onset Centered
250-mb Geo. Ht., Isotachs
500-mb Geo. Ht, Anomalies
850-mb Geo. Ht., RH
SLP, anomalies
51Classical (Dry Onset) T00 Onset Centered
250-mb Geo. Ht., Isotachs
500-mb Geo. Ht, Anomalies
850-mb Geo. Ht., RH
SLP, anomalies
52Classical (Dry Onset) T00 Peak Centered
250-mb Geo. Ht., Isotachs
500-mb Geo. Ht, Anomalies
850-mb Geo. Ht., RH
SLP, anomalies
53CDEN vs. CDRY
- Classical (Diabatically Enhanced)
- E-W elongation of high
- confluence, little ridging _at_ 500
- cold front close by
- Classical (Dry Onset)
- N-S elongation of high
- confluence AND ridging _at_ 500
- cold front far offshore
20 cases
70 cases
Onset time
Onset time
Sea level pressure
Legend
500 mb height
54CDEN CDRY
850-mb Geo. Ht., RH
850-mb Geo. Ht., RH
SLP, anomalies
SLP, anomalies
55HybridT00 Peak-centeredHYBR
56Hybrid (HYBR) T00 Onset Centered
250-mb Geo. Ht., Isotachs
500-mb Geo. Ht, Anomalies
850-mb Geo. Ht., RH
SLP, anomalies
57Weak/Southern OnsetT00 Peak-centeredWKDR
58Weak/Southern Onset (WKDR) T00 Peak Centered
500-mb Geo. Ht, Anomalies
850-mb Geo. Ht., RH
SLP, anomalies
59In-Situ T00 Peak-centeredINST
60In-Situ (INST) T00 Peak Centered
250-mb Geo. Ht., Isotachs
500-mb Geo. Ht, Anomalies
850-mb Geo. Ht., RH
SLP, anomalies
61CAD Impact Data
62-Departure from Average Maximum Temperature (at
GSO, 1st 2 days of event)
Cold Season Events
8.4
6.7
6.6
6.7
1.7
Stan. Dev. cases
19
71
17
31
15
6
63Cold Season Events
64Average Event-Total Precipitation by Sub Type
65Average CAD duration by Sub Type
66Composites Based on Impact?
- We took 90 CLASSICAL CAD events (CDEN CDRY)
- Two categories
- GSO Tmax gt 15F below climo (high-impact)
- GSO Tmax lt 2F below, or above climo (low)
- Built composites to seek differences
- What do you expect to be the difference?
67CAD is Not a Monolithic Phenomenon!
Sea level pressure, anomaly
HIGH-IMPACT CAD
LOW-IMPACT CAD
68Conclusions
- Sub-types consistent with NWS Classification
- 2 additional sub-types, lumped into WKDR
- Warm season CAD more frequent than expected
- Strong events more frequent in cold season
- CAD impact strongly dependent upon clouds,
precipitation, forcing for ascent- key
distinction?
69Conclusions (cont.)
- Sea-level pressure does not tell the whole CAD
story! - Key upper-air features
- Upper jet dominates precipitating high-impact
cases - 500-mb ridge west of CAD region in dry onset
composite - 850-mb ridge axis over CAD region in dry onset
composite - Sfc. High axis orientation consistent with upper
dynamics - For details, see Bailey et al. 2002 WAF paper,
reprints available
70Conclusions (cont.)
- Bottom Line For High-Impact CAD look for
- Upper dynamics, forcing for ascent (jet
entrance/exit circulations, warm advection,
isentropic upglide, etc.) - Moist lower atmosphere
- Lower-tropospheric ridge axis east of damming
region - High impact generally accompanied by clouds,
precipitation at onset - Consider observational signals, be wary of
reliance on model QPF, soundings, etc.
71Thanks to
- Chris Bailey (now at HPC) did much of work for
his M.S. thesis - Kermit Keeter and others for original ideas,
foundation of research - Gail Hartfield for lots of work on sensible
weather climatology - Scott Sharp for case summaries, invaluable for
algorithm testing - Doug Schneider for careful examination of CAD
composites - Jonathan Blaes for web support, endless technical
assistance - NWS CSTAR offices (esp. Neil Stuart, Larry Lee)
and others - NOAA/NWS CSTAR program (HQ, ER), Jeff
Waldstreicher - NCSU Al Riordan, Lian Xie
72CDRY Upstairs CDEN
250-mb Geo. Ht., Isotachs
250-mb Geo. Ht., Isotachs
500-mb Geo. Ht, Anomalies
500-mb Geo. Ht, Anomalies
73Precipitating Vs. Dry CAD
- Original CAD sub-types identified in 10-yr
climatological sample - Major distinction dry onset versus
precipitating CAD - For details, see Bailey et al. 2002 paper (WAF,
reprints available)
74Are we splitting hairs with these distinctions?
- Stratified classical CAD cases by impact on Tmax
- One composite contains cases with Tmax 15F or
more below climatology at GSO (high impact) - The other cases where Tmax was 2F or less below
climo, or above climo at GSO (low impact) - Can you tell which is which?