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School Weather News 1999
From:
education@royal-met-soc.org.uk
Subject: MetLinkInternational Week 2 Tuesday
Date: Tue, 2 Feb 1999 23:07:02 -0000
Dear MetLink participants
I wasn't sure where to start today, so I've decided to travel from
south to north!
Let's begin with Tristan da
Cunha. Did high pressure win the battle I mentioned in
yesterday's review, or did low pressure? Well .... a bit of both!
There's been high pressure today to the north-west (1017 mb) and
south-east (1021 mb) of Tristan da Cunha, with the island itself
between the two in a trough of low pressure. This trough extends from
a deep primary depression (967 mb) centred just to the east of South
Georgia and a secondary depression (987 mb) on its cold front. The
satellite images have shown that there has been a lot of cloud over
the South Atlantic near Tristan da Cunha today. Will the high
pressure win tomorrow? We wait to see.
The Meteosat Image shows a lot of cirrus
over southern Africa again today, but my impression is that there has
not been as much convective activity as yesterday. There do not
appear to have been as many cumulonimbus systems as yesterday. Those
of you who live in Zambia/Zimbabwe/Madagascar: has this been
so?
The weather has still not settled down in
Malta. There have been
showers again today and cool north-easterly winds. At least the
depression which gave the unsettled weather of the past few days has
weakened considerably and may well have disappeared by tomorrow, to
leave a cool but fairly dry northerly wind over Malta.
The high pressure which has been over southern Britain these past few
days is gradually drifting southwards, but maintaining its pressure
value, with 1045 mb over the Bay of Biscay forecast for tomorrow.
There should be fine weather at
Bilbao and
Tarragona tomorrow, with
light easterly winds at Bilbao and light north-easterly winds at
Tarragona. You seem to have had a very nice day today, Tarragona,
judging by your weather report.
It was much nicer in Reading today than yesterday, with light,
variable winds and a lot of sunshine. Much of the cloud we had today
was high cloud, some of it from persistent aircraft condensation
trails. It appears from the weather reports in our data base that
other places in southern Britain had a nice day today. What weather
will we have later in the week? A cold front which was over Scotland
today is moving southwards. According to the weather chart for 1800
GMT, it was then situated a little to the south of Edinburgh and
about to enter Northern Ireland from the north. The forecasters say
it will reach the English Channel by the end of the week.
Over Scandinavia at 1800 GMT today, there was a cold front lying
north- south from about Oslo to the Lofoten Islands and a warm front
lying north-south from the southern Baltic through the Gulf of
Bothnia to Hammerfest. To the east of the warm front, over the whole
of Finland and over northern Sweden, there was very cold air, with
temperatures at 1200 GMT below -25 deg C in northern Finland and
about -10 deg C in southern Finland. There was also a little light
snow on the front. Between the warm front and cold front,
temperatures at 1200 GMT were between -4 and +5 deg C, and over
western parts of southern Norway they were +7 or 8 deg C. There was
quite a lot of fog over Denmark and Germany today (warm air passing
over cold air and cold ground) and snow over many parts of central
and eastern Europe and western parts of central Asia. The apparent
battle between warm and cold air over Finland and Sweden continues.
What will happen tomorrow?
The Intertropical Convergence Zone has again been quite well marked
over the Atlantic Ocean, and situated a few degrees north of the
equator, exactly as the textbooks say. It is still far from
continuous, but more interesting today is the apparent continuity of
the ITCZ with extensive areas of medium-level and cirrus cloud over
central and eastern North Africa. I suspect the latter clouds are
associated with a jet stream (a ribbon of fast-moving air - typically
50 m/s or more - in the upper troposphere). I suspect, to be more
specific, that the clouds lie on the southern side of the entrance
region of the part of the subtropical jet stream which blows fastest
over the Middle East. Have any of you any information about the
winds at 11-12 km altitude over Egypt, Israel and Jordan in the past
few days? That's the height the subtropical jet stream is
found.
That's all for today.
Best regards Malcolm
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