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• Redfield “Whirlwind Theory” Rotation Coriolis • Espy Convergence into Low PGF 1841 • Loomis Rotation AND Convergence 1860 Early Maritime Observations (Winds) http://m.nautil.us/issue/25/water/the-dueling-weatherm en-of-the-1800s

Early Maritime Observations (Winds)

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Early Maritime Observations (Winds). Redfield “Whirlwind Theory” Rotation Coriolis Espy Convergence into Low PGF 1841 Loomis Rotation AND Convergence 1860. Putting it Together (Air Masses). A First Mention of Fronts. Norwegians Begin to go 3-D. Looking More Like Fronts!. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Early Maritime Observations (Winds)

• Redfield• “Whirlwind

Theory”• Rotation• Coriolis

• Espy• Convergence into

Low• PGF• 1841

• Loomis• Rotation AND

Convergence• 1860

Early Maritime Observations (Winds)http://m.nautil.us/issue/25/water/the-dueling-weathermen-of-the-1800s

Page 2: Early Maritime Observations (Winds)

Putting it Together (Air Masses)

Page 3: Early Maritime Observations (Winds)

A First Mention of Fronts

Page 4: Early Maritime Observations (Winds)

Norwegians Begin to go 3-D

Page 5: Early Maritime Observations (Winds)

Looking More Like Fronts!

Page 6: Early Maritime Observations (Winds)

Fronts and Cross-Sections: 1921

Page 7: Early Maritime Observations (Winds)

Another View

Page 8: Early Maritime Observations (Winds)
Page 9: Early Maritime Observations (Winds)

Is the Norwegian Model Still Relevant?

Unified Surface Analysis Manual

Page 10: Early Maritime Observations (Winds)

Artists don’t get it: Spot the Error!

Page 11: Early Maritime Observations (Winds)

What’s Wrong with This Picture?

Page 12: Early Maritime Observations (Winds)

How About This One?

Page 13: Early Maritime Observations (Winds)

Circled Obs DO NOT Fit CG Pressure Field!

Page 14: Early Maritime Observations (Winds)

Human-Adjusted Isobars: A Better Fit

Page 15: Early Maritime Observations (Winds)

The Station Model

You are expected to already know how to read thisPressure in this example is 1024.7mb

Isobars:- The standard contour is simply a quasi-universal starting point for plotting, and is 1000mb- The contour interval is the change in value between isobars. It will be 4mb or less (2mb or 1mb for mesoscale)- Intermediate isobars are drawn in areas of slight pressure gradient and are ½ the value of the general map contour interval- Regular contours are solid lines, intermediates are long dash, nested intermediates are short dash and you may not jump to 1mb intermediates without first using 2mb intervals

Page 16: Early Maritime Observations (Winds)

Some Standard Surface Symbols

- Frontolysis and frontogenesis will be covered later

- Ignore squall line, ridge, tropical wave: we do not plot the last two and use a different conven-tion for squall lines

- Troughs may be colored brown, purple or black

- Drylines (ignore for now) may be colored brown or orange

Page 17: Early Maritime Observations (Winds)

Reminders (things you should already know)

• Look over the error sheet when doing your weekly maps and try to avoid those most obvious mistakes

• Front Type is determined by air movement on cold side of boundary

• Front Location is determined by careful analysis of:– Pressure troughs– Wind shifts– Temperature and dewpoint gradients– Cloud and precipitation location– Pressure tendencies

Page 18: Early Maritime Observations (Winds)

For Those Away at AMS…• Class Policy (please keep these in mind):

– Working together on weekly maps is ENCOURAGED and RECOMMENDED– Working together on weekly quizzes is considered CHEATING, these are

designed to test individual knowledge and progress• Pre-Test

– Print this and individually list the errors (do not work together on this)– Do not include the jumpy nature of the isobars, this is an artifact of the

crappy software I used, but, yes, isobars should be neat and smooth• Quiz 1

– Print this and individually answer the questions and mark the appropriate maps. Have your glasses ready if needed, the numbers are very small

• Map 1– Print this, preferably on 11x17-inch paper (if available), and analyze:

• Fronts, highs and lows (proper symbols and color)• Isobars (4mb intervals, 1000mb standard contour, label isobars, use regular black pencil)