Weather Extremes |
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| Posted by: Christopher C. Burt, 02:34 PM GMT on Oktober 02, 2010 | +1 |



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Christopher C. Burt is the author of 'Extreme Weather; A Guide and Record Book'. He studied meteorology at the Univ. of Wisconsin-Madison.
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Those are some absolutely incredible rainfall numbers, especially for a non-hurricane event. Amazing, just amazing.
Oh, and thanks. Your new blog is already near the top of my list.
Would my "Weather Machines" make history if they can control/regulate the climate by manipulating SSTs?
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Really? You should take that up with the NHC; I'm sure they'd appreciate the input of someone with your unparalleled meteorological education and experience. :-)
Seriously, though: the NHC classified Nicole as a tropical storm because the system met the qualifications to be one. Period...
Great post.Wow we're talking about ALOT of water.With that graphic it really sinks in.
Thanks for your input.
v/r
Moe
Oh come on Michael you and I both know that even the universe doesn't have an infinate amount of energy but they do produce an enormous amount of energy. Also about the part of the cooler water not radiating heat to space in proportion to warmer water. What happens is as our climate warms more water vapor will form thus blocking more heat from getting to space. That portion which is blocked just gets transferred to the atmosphere thus heating it more. As the tunnels cool ssts which in turn will cool the air that comes in contact with it less water vapor is formed and so more heat is radiated to space.The Greenhouse blanket becomes thinner so more heat can come and go more effectivly without getting trapped. So with that I hope you can see how they can work???? There is so much good they can do for us if someone would computer model them I am sure they will see the light.
A post of mine in Dr. M's blog a few days back with TPW anomaly:
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Where is the double TPW? Where is the great big contribution of Nicole over normal moisture available to be pulled along this front?
Morning of the 28th, before Nicole did much:
About the time the last advisory on Nicole was posted:
Yeah, so TPW anomaly was around 100% of normal up to 150% of normal in some places. But some especially higher than normal TPW with Nicole's signature on it simply doesn't appear here.
Full loop: http://www.osdpd.noaa.gov/bTPW/TPW_Animation.html?fromDate=20100926&fromHour=23&endDate=20100929&en dHour=23&product=CONUS_PCT&interval=6hours
I personally think you guys are hanging your "Nicole's moisture" hat on what is simply convergence, bringing very high moisture totals to the frontal boundary, nothingmore. This front is doing just that (heck, check out Pennsylvania's TPW 2 days before Nicole got into the mix).
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I've seen nothing that suggests that the NC rains would have been any different if there wasn't even a tropical wave in the vicinity.
For another example of frontal-induced convergence and tropical moisture draw, without a tropical system (but similar dynamics), see the NESDIS TPW presentation about the Nashville river flooding here: ftp://satepsanone.nesdis.noaa.gov/Presentations/Conferences/NWA_Annual_Oct2010.ppt
Aside: Floyd was obviously a different setup.
Must be a pretty convoluted process to determine TPW over the ocean using a blend of satellites that take 3-5 days to cover the earth-in combination with weather balloons for "land" TPW.
Yes?
Another look at that tropical moisture from MIMIC.
This is an excellent post and one that is quite accurate (for the most part). That being said, it is still not entirely accurate to suggest that the moisture from the remnants of Nicole did not play a role in our record rainfall totals for the five day period. It would be far more accurate to state that this historical event was a combination of all the aforementioned factors-with the remnants and the moisture of "Nicole" playing a role in the process, but was not the primary contribution to it.
The fact is that the remnant circulation of "Nicole" and the direct moisture associated with it did in fact bring additional rainfall to our area. So, it would not be entirely accurate to suggest that the NC rainfall totals would have been "no different" had there been no "Nicole" or a "tropical wave" in the general vicinity.
With all the aforementioned in mind, I too agree that the vast majority of the record rainfall was not directly attributed to TS Nicole and you did an excellent job of highlighting that particular aspect of this rather historic weather event.
The fact of the matter is that there were other areas of low pressure that developed and rode up along the relatively stalled frontal boundary. As a result, it would be fair to say that these areas of low pressure were just as significant-if not more so-than the area of low pressure know as "Nicole" that ultimately moved through our area.
A couple of anomalies:
A strong (20-40kt low-level EPAC jet.
The large (Caribbean-wide) depression that ultimately got a name.
Monsoon Nicole did a great job in converging the EPAC tap and ITCZ moisture S of the front into a single moisture channel between the upper trough/front and a stubborn mid-Atlantic ridge.
But yeah, It woulda rained anyway.
:)
Speaking of rain,
AREA FORECAST DISCUSSION
NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE HOUSTON/GALVESTON TX
PREV DISCUSSION... /ISSUED 410 AM CDT TUE OCT 5 2010/
...AFTERNOON INTERIOR RHS LOWER INTO THE LOWER 20 PERCENTILE
UNDER LIGHT EASTERLY WINDS. PER THIS .2-.4 INCH PWAT AIR
MASS...
I never can seem to remember those terms when I need them...
lol
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