MetLink Report 1 Feb 1999
(Day 6)


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School Weather News 1999


Weather analysis - 1 Feb 1999


In the United Kingdom, we have high pressure (1044 mb over southern England) and this is a very good time to check your barometers. Please note that anticyclones do not necessarily bring sunny weather. Over most parts of the British Isles today, the skies have been overcast. Winds have been very light in most parts of the UK.

There are now winds from the north-west over northern Scandinavia and an occluded front has moved across northern parts of Norway, Sweden and Finland. A warm front has moved across southern parts of Norway and Sweden. The temperature was +5 deg C in northern Finland at 1200 GMT today. What a change from last week!

As you will see from a separate e-mail, Malta has had interesting weather this weekend. There have been westerly winds over Spain and thick cloud over the Costa del Sol!! There are many, many cumulonimbus clusters over southern Africa -- and that coastal strip of Namibia is clear of cloud again. The ITCZ is well-marked again today over the ocean. The subtropical anticyclone over the South Atlantic has drifted back towards Tristan da Cunha but is not very intense (only about 1020 mb). There is also a small area of low pressure not far to the west of Tristan and the Meteosat Image shows a lot of cloud in the vicinity of Tristan da Cunha and Gough Island.




MetLinkInternational Week 2: Monday 1 Feb 1999


From: education@royal-met-soc.org.uk
Subject: MetLinkInternational Week 2: Monday 1 Feb 1999
Date: Mon, 1 Feb 1999 22:36:02 -0000

Dear MetLink friends

I had planned to call this message 'MetLinkInternational Day 6'. However, so many of you entered observations in the data base for Saturday and Sunday that I thought I should be specific over which day I meant. It was great to see so much activity over the weekend.

Who has pride of place today? Well ..... in my mind, two of you share the honour.

In Malta, there was some extraordinary weather yesterday. Large hailstones fell and the weather was unusually cold, as it was again today. And the weather wasn't very warm at Tarragona, either. Over the whole of the western Mediterranean, the winds have been from the east or north-east today -- and that's a cold direction, as you will see if you look at today's temperatures over southern and central Europe (only 2 deg C at Marseilles at 1200 GMT today and 5 deg C at Rome). Malta has remained close to a squally 'trough' which extends westwards from the depression over the Ionian Sea (1009 mb) which I have mentioned before. The centre of that depression lies just to the west of Greece now and the weather has been rather wet in parts of Greece today and snowy in Bulgaria.

The other place with remarkable weather has been Sweden, as Christer reported from Varnamo. He told us about the dramatic rise in temperature and the problems caused by wet, heavy snow. He also mentioned severe fog, which resulted from the warm, moist air of the fronts which crossed Scandinavia yesterday being cooled as it passed over very cold ground. It was advection fog, a type of fog which may form at any time of day or night and persist for many hours. In contrast, radiation fog forms in the evening and at night when the sky is clear and the wind speed is 1 or 2 m/s. The clear sky allows radiation to escape from the earth's surface and the air in contact with the ground to cool to its dew-point temperature. This type of fog usually dissipates during the morning, when sunlight heats the ground under the fog and thereby raises the temperature above the air's dew-point temperature. Yes .... sunlight does get through the fog. It's not all reflected off the top of the fog. If there is daylight, some sunlight is reaching the ground.

Over northern Scandinavia today, a battle is going on, between very cold air over north-west Russia and much milder air to the west. At 1200 GMT today, the temperature was -28 deg C near Murmansk and -18 deg C in northern Finland, but +5 deg C in central Sweden and +4 deg C near Stockholm. Will the cold air win and turn the cars back into kangaroos? From the forecast chart it is not easy to decide. Let's watch this situation with interest.

For those in parts of the world where people have grown tired of rain recently, such as the British Isles, Tristan da Cunha has not been a place to visit these past few days. There has been a lot of rain there, brought by a small but active area of low pressure. Again, this a weather battle area just now, with high pressure (1018 mb) not far to the east of Tristan da Cunha and a deep depression (970 mb) about 2,000 km to the south-west. Will the high pressure win, or will the unsettled weather continue to give Tristan da Cunha rain?

Over southern Africa, the satellite image shows large patches of upper cloud (cirrus-type cloud made of ice crystals), recognisable by its diffuse nature, as distinct from the sharply-defined edges of lower cloud. There would appear to many cumulonimbus (thundery) clouds.
Zambia, Zimbabwe and Madagascar: was there a lot of upper cloud today?

The Intertropical Convergence Zone is still quite well defined, but notice that it is not joined up to the convective clouds over southern Africa. This is not consistent with the European text-book concept of the ITCZ at this time of year.

Finally, we turn to the part of the MetLink world with the highest barometric pressure, the British Isles. At 1200 GMT today, the pressure was 1043 mb over south-west England, near Plymouth. As one would expect near the centre of an anticyclone, winds have been very light. There hasn't been much sun over England and a large part of Wales, though. I was in Cardiff until 1000 GMT. Then, I drove to Pinewood School, near Swindon. I was there from 1130 until 1430 and then I drove to Reading. All this time, the cloud condition was the same: 8/8 of a low, grey, featureless stratus cloud. At Pennar and Larne, though, the sun shone, and Gillespie's reported a pleasant day, too. The forecast for tomorrow is for high pressure to persist over southern parts of the British Isles, with the centre of the High drifting south-westwards and a cold front moving southwards across Scotland and Northern Ireland.

That's all for today.

Best regards Malcolm




This week's weather - some thoughts


From: "Dr. Steve Dorling" <S.Dorling@uea.ac.uk>
Subject: This week's weather - some thoughts
Date: Mon, 1 Feb 1999 10:06:42 +0000

Dear MetLink participants,

Greetings from Norwich, England. Malcolm asked me to send some thoughts on current weather conditions, in his absence this morning.

It isn't just school work which benefits from exchanging weather information and hearing about extreme weather. I was talking to my meteorology undergraduate students last week on the subject of air masses and the extreme conditions in Finland were a perfect focus for the debate. At the other extreme, I take my 2 young children (age 1 and 3) to their nursery on my bike in the morning and hence the weather is very relevant to us! Of course when the wind is from the north, they notice! However, my daughter has also begun to talk about which direction the smoke is blowing in from some local chimneys. She now 'predicts' how cold it is outside by observing the plume from indoors and chooses her coat accordingly! I keep telling her there is no money to be made in meteorology but it seems to have captured her interest, just like the rest of us! She is now colouring in a 'Weather Tree' where each leaf represents the weather conditions each day on our bicycle journey. At the end of the year we can see 'at a glance' how variable the weather is at any particular time. Suffice to say that her yellow crayon (representing sun) hasn't had a lot of use yet!

One web site which I tend to visit quite often is

http://www-imk.physik.uni-karlsruhe.de/~gmueller/pics/ukmpanel1.gif

There is a graphic on this page which shows the forecast (from the UK Met Office Weather Forecast model) for a couple of days ahead for Europe and the North Atlantic. It shows that the High Pressure System which the whole of the UK is presently experiencing is set to remain dominant over the next two days, although its centre will slip a little further south allowing the pressure gradient to intensify somewhat over northern Britain. Cloud conditions in these winter Highs really are variable. Sometimes old fronts get incorporated into the circulation of anticyclones and we get extended periods of 'gloom' sometimes with light drizzle (as this morning in Norwich).

Well, winter is getting on and Southern Britain is yet to see a significant dose of snow. A very localised inch fell shortly before Christmas in the Norwich area (hardly worth mentioning in the context of typical falls in Finland I'm sure) but I wonder if we will escape major disruption this year ? Of course it doesn't take much snow in England to cause havoc - we are not equipped for it!

Finally, browsing the excellent MetLink web site maintained by John Harris, I was most impressed by the 'Students Guide to Meteorology & Climate' developed by the Kings School, Worcester. Take a look at this very valuable resource if you have a chance ...

http://www.ksw.org.uk/atmosphere/pages/index.html

Best wishes

Steve Dorling

Dr. Steve Dorling, School of Environmental Sciences, University of East Anglia, Norwich, NR4-7TJ, UK Tel: +44 1603 592533, Fax: +44 1603 507719
e-mail: s.dorling@uea.ac.uk, http://www.uea.ac.uk/~e870/dorling.html
UEA Weather Station: http://www.uea.ac.uk/~e870/weather/weather_welcome.shtml




DTOT Meteosat Image 1 Feb 1999






N Atlantic synoptic chart 1 Feb 1999








S Atlantic synoptic chart 1 Feb 1999





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