jennifer q. belge eric g. hoffman plymouth state university 11/06/08 northeast regional operational...

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Jennifer Q. Belge Eric G. Hoffman Plymouth State University 11/06/08 Northeast Regional Operational Workshop Preferred Regions of Convective Development over Northern New England as a Function of Flow Regime: Southwesterly Flow Case Studies http://www.eoearth.org/upload/thumb/6/61/Mature_thunderstorm_cloud.jpg/250px- Mature_thunderstorm_cloud.jpg

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Page 1: Jennifer Q. Belge Eric G. Hoffman Plymouth State University 11/06/08 Northeast Regional Operational Workshop Preferred Regions of Convective Development

Jennifer Q. BelgeEric G. Hoffman

Plymouth State University

11/06/08Northeast Regional

Operational Workshop

Preferred Regions of Convective Development over

Northern New England as a Function of Flow Regime: Southwesterly Flow Case

Studies

http://www.eoearth.org/upload/thumb/6/61/Mature_thunderstorm_cloud.jpg/250px-Mature_thunderstorm_cloud.jpg

Page 2: Jennifer Q. Belge Eric G. Hoffman Plymouth State University 11/06/08 Northeast Regional Operational Workshop Preferred Regions of Convective Development

Previous Work- Evan Lowery (2008) 5 year climatology of northern New

England thunderstormsKGYX radar domainApril – September2003-2007SCIT

Spatial distribution of cells as a function of large-scale flow at 700 hPa

Page 3: Jennifer Q. Belge Eric G. Hoffman Plymouth State University 11/06/08 Northeast Regional Operational Workshop Preferred Regions of Convective Development

Results- Lowery (2008)

SW FLOW5 clusters

○ Central Oxford, Franklin and Somerset counties in ME

○ Just south of Belknap, Merrimack border in NH

○ Southern Oxford county in ME

○ Northern Grafton county in NH

○ Southern Somerset county in ME

Grafton

Oxford

FranklinSomerset

Coos

CarrollBelknap

Merrimack

York

Strafford

Rockingham

Hillsborough

Sullivan

Cheshire

Piscataquis

Aroostook

Cumberland

Androscoggin

Kennebec

Penobscot

WaldoKnox

LincolnSagadahoc

NW FLOW 3 clusters

Border of Strafford (NH) and York (ME) counties

Tri-county border of Oxford (ME), Carroll (NH) and York(ME)

Border of Grafton (NH) and Coos (NH) county

Page 4: Jennifer Q. Belge Eric G. Hoffman Plymouth State University 11/06/08 Northeast Regional Operational Workshop Preferred Regions of Convective Development

Motivation

Lowery’s study did not address:Why are there preferred regions of

development with respect to flow regime?

Differences between flow regimes? Forecasting potential

KGYX

Page 5: Jennifer Q. Belge Eric G. Hoffman Plymouth State University 11/06/08 Northeast Regional Operational Workshop Preferred Regions of Convective Development

Scientific Questions

Why do thunderstorm cells initiate where they do as a function of large-scale flow?SW and NW @ 700 hPa only

Are there certain meteorological patterns present in the mesoscale environment that is conducive to convection in these regions found by Lowery (2008)?

Page 6: Jennifer Q. Belge Eric G. Hoffman Plymouth State University 11/06/08 Northeast Regional Operational Workshop Preferred Regions of Convective Development

Data and Methodology

Case StudiesRadar reflectivity examined for each

case from May-September 2007 only Case study selection

1.Cells were to initiate in the significant areas identified by Lowery (2008)

2.Cells were to not be associated with a frontal zone○ Eliminate influence of frontal boundary

in mesoscale analysis

Page 7: Jennifer Q. Belge Eric G. Hoffman Plymouth State University 11/06/08 Northeast Regional Operational Workshop Preferred Regions of Convective Development

Results

Radar Sounding 12 UTC

KGYX Surface analysis RUC

Synoptic overview

12 UTC LAPS

KGYXMesoscale

analysis17 UTC

Page 8: Jennifer Q. Belge Eric G. Hoffman Plymouth State University 11/06/08 Northeast Regional Operational Workshop Preferred Regions of Convective Development

July 13, 2007

Page 9: Jennifer Q. Belge Eric G. Hoffman Plymouth State University 11/06/08 Northeast Regional Operational Workshop Preferred Regions of Convective Development
Page 10: Jennifer Q. Belge Eric G. Hoffman Plymouth State University 11/06/08 Northeast Regional Operational Workshop Preferred Regions of Convective Development

Synoptic Analysis12 UTC

Page 11: Jennifer Q. Belge Eric G. Hoffman Plymouth State University 11/06/08 Northeast Regional Operational Workshop Preferred Regions of Convective Development

Surface Analysis 12 UTC

Page 12: Jennifer Q. Belge Eric G. Hoffman Plymouth State University 11/06/08 Northeast Regional Operational Workshop Preferred Regions of Convective Development
Page 13: Jennifer Q. Belge Eric G. Hoffman Plymouth State University 11/06/08 Northeast Regional Operational Workshop Preferred Regions of Convective Development

500 hPa Height 12 UTC

Page 14: Jennifer Q. Belge Eric G. Hoffman Plymouth State University 11/06/08 Northeast Regional Operational Workshop Preferred Regions of Convective Development

250 hPa Height and Wind 12 UTC

Page 15: Jennifer Q. Belge Eric G. Hoffman Plymouth State University 11/06/08 Northeast Regional Operational Workshop Preferred Regions of Convective Development

Sounding 12 UTC

Page 16: Jennifer Q. Belge Eric G. Hoffman Plymouth State University 11/06/08 Northeast Regional Operational Workshop Preferred Regions of Convective Development

Mesoscale Analysis17 UTC

Page 17: Jennifer Q. Belge Eric G. Hoffman Plymouth State University 11/06/08 Northeast Regional Operational Workshop Preferred Regions of Convective Development
Page 18: Jennifer Q. Belge Eric G. Hoffman Plymouth State University 11/06/08 Northeast Regional Operational Workshop Preferred Regions of Convective Development

Surface Analysis 18 UTC

Page 19: Jennifer Q. Belge Eric G. Hoffman Plymouth State University 11/06/08 Northeast Regional Operational Workshop Preferred Regions of Convective Development

Surface Dew Point 17 UTC

Page 20: Jennifer Q. Belge Eric G. Hoffman Plymouth State University 11/06/08 Northeast Regional Operational Workshop Preferred Regions of Convective Development

Surface CAPE 17 UTC

Page 21: Jennifer Q. Belge Eric G. Hoffman Plymouth State University 11/06/08 Northeast Regional Operational Workshop Preferred Regions of Convective Development

Surface Flow Vectors and Topo 17 UTC

Page 22: Jennifer Q. Belge Eric G. Hoffman Plymouth State University 11/06/08 Northeast Regional Operational Workshop Preferred Regions of Convective Development

Surface Flow Vectors and Topo 17 UTC

Page 23: Jennifer Q. Belge Eric G. Hoffman Plymouth State University 11/06/08 Northeast Regional Operational Workshop Preferred Regions of Convective Development

Surface Convergence 17 UTC

Page 24: Jennifer Q. Belge Eric G. Hoffman Plymouth State University 11/06/08 Northeast Regional Operational Workshop Preferred Regions of Convective Development

Mean Sea Level Pressure 17 UTC

Page 25: Jennifer Q. Belge Eric G. Hoffman Plymouth State University 11/06/08 Northeast Regional Operational Workshop Preferred Regions of Convective Development

Conclusions

Page 26: Jennifer Q. Belge Eric G. Hoffman Plymouth State University 11/06/08 Northeast Regional Operational Workshop Preferred Regions of Convective Development

Preliminary Results July 13, 2007 SW

Flow CaseMoisture &

instability sufficient over entire area○ Genesis region

was not uniqueSurface

convergence and corresponding surface trough could provide the necessary lift

Results from the August 2, 2007 case show the same results and conclusions

Page 27: Jennifer Q. Belge Eric G. Hoffman Plymouth State University 11/06/08 Northeast Regional Operational Workshop Preferred Regions of Convective Development

WORKS CITED

Lowery, E.M, 2008: Using the WSR-88D Storm Structure Product to Develop a Climatology of Northern New England Thunderstorms as a Function of Large-Scale Flow, Plymouth State University, Master of Science Thesis

WORKS CITED

Lowery, E.M, 2008: Using the WSR-88D Storm Structure Product to Develop a Climatology of Northern New England Thunderstorms as a Function of Large-Scale Flow, Plymouth State University, Master of Science Thesis

Questions?

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