Air Masses:
Type, Modification, and
Associated weather
ENVI1400: Lecture 5
ENVI 1400 : Meteorology and Forecasting : lecture 5 2
Air Masses
A body of air with more-or-less
uniform physical properties over
horizontal distances of hundreds
of kilometres
• Temperature
• Moisture content
• lapse rate
Properties and degree of
uniformity depend on:
• Source of the air
• History – air mass
modification
• Age of air mass
Input of heat and moisture to
atmosphere is non-uniform.
Creation of a uniform air mass
achieved via:
– Mixing
– Radiative processes
– Time (3 – 7 days)
Source regions: areas of
extensive uniform surface
conditions situated below quasi-
stationary high pressure systems.
In low latitudes there are few
strong temperature gradients; air
masses distinguished by moisture
content – more difficult to
interpret.
ENVI 1400 : Meteorology and Forecasting : lecture 5 3
Air Mass Modification Processes
Thermodynamic
• Surface heating/cooling
– Change of temperature of
surface, or advection over
different surface
• Addition of moisture
– Surface evaporation
– Evaporation of precipitation
falling from higher level
• Loss of moisture
– Condensation, precipitation
• Radiative heating/cooling
– slow compared to surface
heat exchange (up to 2
weeks)
Dynamic
• Turbulent mixing
– Increases uniformity of air
mass. Very efficient close to
surface.
• Large-scale lifting/descent
– Causes adiabatic changes of
temperature
– May result in formation or
evaporation of clouds
ENVI 1400 : Meteorology and Forecasting : lecture 5 4
Air Mass Characterization
Air masses are classified
according to how they compare to
the properties of the underlying
surface and of adjacent air
masses.
4 (sometimes 5) basic
classifications – combine source
region and surface type:
• Maritime/marine (m)
– high moisture content
• Continental (c)
– typically low moisture
• Tropical (T)
– warm
• Polar (P)
– cold
Also:
• Arctic (A)
– very cold
– Frequently indistinguishable
from polar air masses in
lower levels
– Originates over polar
icecaps rather than high
latitude land masses.
Some classification schemes
include indication of whether air is
warmer (w) or cooler (k) than
underlying surface after air mass
modification has taken place; e.g.
cPk, mPw.
ENVI 1400 : Meteorology and Forecasting : lecture 5 5
Origin: continental anticyclones
over Siberia and northern Canada
during winter; Arctic basin (cA)
when high pressure dominant.
No sources of cP in southern
hemisphere. Antarctica is a
source of cA all year round.
Snow covered surface  cooling
of surface layers, equilibrium
vapour pressure is low  low
moisture content (0.1 to 0.5 g/kg).
Cooling at surface  stable
stratification, limited mixing;
allows further cooling by radiation
resulting in very low
temperatures.
Subsidence of air aloft (and
associated adiabatic warming)
combined with radiative cooling at
low levels  pronounced
inversion from surface to about
850 mb (~1 km).
Low humidity results in generally
low cloud amounts.
Solar heating of land surface in
summer removes source of cold
air.
Continental Polar (cP)
ENVI 1400 : Meteorology and Forecasting : lecture 5 6
H Continental Polar (cP)
Source: Siberia, very cold
in winter, hot and dry in
summer.
Summer: Warm & dry,
cloud free, except perhaps
at east coast where cool &
showery.
Winter: Snow near east
coast; occasional snow
showers in west. Very cold
& strong easterly winds
Track: overland,
short track over
North Sea
ENVI 1400 : Meteorology and Forecasting : lecture 5 7
ENVI 1400 : Meteorology and Forecasting : lecture 5 8
ENVI 1400 : Meteorology and Forecasting : lecture 5 9
Maritime Polar (mP)
Origin: In northern hemisphere
mP results primarily from
modification of cP by flow over
oceans: Siberia flowing over north
Pacific, northern Canada &
Greenland flowing over north
Atlantic.
In summer the Arctic icecap –
significant areas of melt water,
and open leads in ice, provide
effective water surface.
In southern hemisphere: oceans
surrounding Antarctica.
In winter modified cA provides
colder mP than modified cP.
Cool and moist, extensive cloud
cover.
During initial flow over water, cP
is warmed and moistened. High
surface heat and moisture fluxes
 instability and strong
convection; flow is very turbulent,
increasing amounts of cumulus
form, often in streets aligned with
wind.
Downwind, large cumulus
organised in first closed, then
open cells. Air mass now cool,
moist mP, extensive cloud cover.
ENVI 1400 : Meteorology and Forecasting : lecture 5 10
ENVI 1400 : Meteorology and Forecasting : lecture 5 11
Maritime Polar (mP)
Source: North Canada &
Greenland. Very cold.
Summer: Heavy showers,
thunderstorms over high
ground.
Winter: Heavy showers in
north-west; clear skies in
east at night giving frost.
Dry in lee of mountains.
L
Track: cool, moist,
unstable
ENVI 1400 : Meteorology and Forecasting : lecture 5 12
ENVI 1400 : Meteorology and Forecasting : lecture 5 13
ENVI 1400 : Meteorology and Forecasting : lecture 5 14
L
Track: warmer & wetter
than mP
Returning Polar Maritime
Source: North Canada.
Very cold and dry
Summer: Very warm,
stratus clouds in southwest,
squally showers & storms
inland.
Winter: stratus cloud,
showers over high ground,
particularly in west.
ENVI 1400 : Meteorology and Forecasting : lecture 5 15
ENVI 1400 : Meteorology and Forecasting : lecture 5 16
ENVI 1400 : Meteorology and Forecasting : lecture 5 17
L
Arctic Maritime (mA)
Source: Arctic seas / ice-
cap. Very cold.
Summer: Cold, frequent
heavy showers.
Winter: Very cold; strong
winds from north and north-
west. Heavy snow showers,
particularly in north and
coastal areas. Cold & bright
in lake district and South
Wales in lee of mountains
to north.
Track: short; warm & moist
at surface, cold aloft; unstable
ENVI 1400 : Meteorology and Forecasting : lecture 5 18
ENVI 1400 : Meteorology and Forecasting : lecture 5 19
ENVI 1400 : Meteorology and Forecasting : lecture 5 20
Maritime Tropical (mT)
Origin: Oceanic subtropical high
pressure cells – mid Atlantic
(Azores High), much of pacific.
50% of southern hemisphere is a
source of mT.
High temperatures, and high
humidity in lower layers. Stable or
near neutral stratification.
Modification of warm air is usually
slow.
Cooling from surface as air moves
to higher latitudes results in
formation of advection fog. If
wind speed is high, mechanical
mixing produces a deeper
boundary layer (few hundred
metres) and low stratiform cloud
forms – stratus or stratocumulus.
Forced ascent at land can result
in thick cloud and heavy rain.
Advection fog, Golden Gate Bridge
ENVI 1400 : Meteorology and Forecasting : lecture 5 21
L
H
Track: moist at surface
Maritime Tropical (mT)
Source: warm tropical
oceans
Summer: Southwest winds;
warm & sunny inland. Low
stratus clouds round west
coast.
Winter: Stratus clouds/hill
fog/drizzle clearing to the
northeast. Warm, muggy,
with prolonged rainfall in
westerly mountains.
ENVI 1400 : Meteorology and Forecasting : lecture 5 22
ENVI 1400 : Meteorology and Forecasting : lecture 5 23
ENVI 1400 : Meteorology and Forecasting : lecture 5 24
Continental Tropical (cT)
Origin: Continental parts of
subtropical high pressure cells
(e.g. north Africa) or regions of
generally light, variable winds &
subsidence in upper troposphere
over major landmasses during
summer (e.g. central Asia).
Strong solar heating of land mass
results in unstable stratification
and strong convection. Low
humidity coupled with subsidence
means limits cloud development
and preciptitation.
In the northern hemisphere
winter, north Africa is the only
source of cT.
Modification during transit over
water (e.g. from N. Africa moving
over Mediterranean into Europe):
picks up lots of water vapour,
lowering the density of humidified
air and triggering strong
convection. Large cumulus and
thunderstorms form.
ENVI 1400 : Meteorology and Forecasting : lecture 5 25
L
H
Continental Tropical (cT)
Source: North Africa – hot
and dry.
Summer only: Heatwave
weather, hazy with
occasional thunderstorm.
Track: overland with
short sea track
ENVI 1400 : Meteorology and Forecasting : lecture 5 26
ENVI 1400 : Meteorology and Forecasting : lecture 5 27
ENVI 1400 : Meteorology and Forecasting : lecture 5 28
Summary
• “Air masses” are large regions of air with
distinct properties
• Originate in high-pressure regions, and
move towards low pressure
• Modified by changes in surface properties,
and radiative warming/cooling
• Associated with different general weather
conditions over UK

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05-Air-Masses.ppt

  • 1. Air Masses: Type, Modification, and Associated weather ENVI1400: Lecture 5
  • 2. ENVI 1400 : Meteorology and Forecasting : lecture 5 2 Air Masses A body of air with more-or-less uniform physical properties over horizontal distances of hundreds of kilometres • Temperature • Moisture content • lapse rate Properties and degree of uniformity depend on: • Source of the air • History – air mass modification • Age of air mass Input of heat and moisture to atmosphere is non-uniform. Creation of a uniform air mass achieved via: – Mixing – Radiative processes – Time (3 – 7 days) Source regions: areas of extensive uniform surface conditions situated below quasi- stationary high pressure systems. In low latitudes there are few strong temperature gradients; air masses distinguished by moisture content – more difficult to interpret.
  • 3. ENVI 1400 : Meteorology and Forecasting : lecture 5 3 Air Mass Modification Processes Thermodynamic • Surface heating/cooling – Change of temperature of surface, or advection over different surface • Addition of moisture – Surface evaporation – Evaporation of precipitation falling from higher level • Loss of moisture – Condensation, precipitation • Radiative heating/cooling – slow compared to surface heat exchange (up to 2 weeks) Dynamic • Turbulent mixing – Increases uniformity of air mass. Very efficient close to surface. • Large-scale lifting/descent – Causes adiabatic changes of temperature – May result in formation or evaporation of clouds
  • 4. ENVI 1400 : Meteorology and Forecasting : lecture 5 4 Air Mass Characterization Air masses are classified according to how they compare to the properties of the underlying surface and of adjacent air masses. 4 (sometimes 5) basic classifications – combine source region and surface type: • Maritime/marine (m) – high moisture content • Continental (c) – typically low moisture • Tropical (T) – warm • Polar (P) – cold Also: • Arctic (A) – very cold – Frequently indistinguishable from polar air masses in lower levels – Originates over polar icecaps rather than high latitude land masses. Some classification schemes include indication of whether air is warmer (w) or cooler (k) than underlying surface after air mass modification has taken place; e.g. cPk, mPw.
  • 5. ENVI 1400 : Meteorology and Forecasting : lecture 5 5 Origin: continental anticyclones over Siberia and northern Canada during winter; Arctic basin (cA) when high pressure dominant. No sources of cP in southern hemisphere. Antarctica is a source of cA all year round. Snow covered surface  cooling of surface layers, equilibrium vapour pressure is low  low moisture content (0.1 to 0.5 g/kg). Cooling at surface  stable stratification, limited mixing; allows further cooling by radiation resulting in very low temperatures. Subsidence of air aloft (and associated adiabatic warming) combined with radiative cooling at low levels  pronounced inversion from surface to about 850 mb (~1 km). Low humidity results in generally low cloud amounts. Solar heating of land surface in summer removes source of cold air. Continental Polar (cP)
  • 6. ENVI 1400 : Meteorology and Forecasting : lecture 5 6 H Continental Polar (cP) Source: Siberia, very cold in winter, hot and dry in summer. Summer: Warm & dry, cloud free, except perhaps at east coast where cool & showery. Winter: Snow near east coast; occasional snow showers in west. Very cold & strong easterly winds Track: overland, short track over North Sea
  • 7. ENVI 1400 : Meteorology and Forecasting : lecture 5 7
  • 8. ENVI 1400 : Meteorology and Forecasting : lecture 5 8
  • 9. ENVI 1400 : Meteorology and Forecasting : lecture 5 9 Maritime Polar (mP) Origin: In northern hemisphere mP results primarily from modification of cP by flow over oceans: Siberia flowing over north Pacific, northern Canada & Greenland flowing over north Atlantic. In summer the Arctic icecap – significant areas of melt water, and open leads in ice, provide effective water surface. In southern hemisphere: oceans surrounding Antarctica. In winter modified cA provides colder mP than modified cP. Cool and moist, extensive cloud cover. During initial flow over water, cP is warmed and moistened. High surface heat and moisture fluxes  instability and strong convection; flow is very turbulent, increasing amounts of cumulus form, often in streets aligned with wind. Downwind, large cumulus organised in first closed, then open cells. Air mass now cool, moist mP, extensive cloud cover.
  • 10. ENVI 1400 : Meteorology and Forecasting : lecture 5 10
  • 11. ENVI 1400 : Meteorology and Forecasting : lecture 5 11 Maritime Polar (mP) Source: North Canada & Greenland. Very cold. Summer: Heavy showers, thunderstorms over high ground. Winter: Heavy showers in north-west; clear skies in east at night giving frost. Dry in lee of mountains. L Track: cool, moist, unstable
  • 12. ENVI 1400 : Meteorology and Forecasting : lecture 5 12
  • 13. ENVI 1400 : Meteorology and Forecasting : lecture 5 13
  • 14. ENVI 1400 : Meteorology and Forecasting : lecture 5 14 L Track: warmer & wetter than mP Returning Polar Maritime Source: North Canada. Very cold and dry Summer: Very warm, stratus clouds in southwest, squally showers & storms inland. Winter: stratus cloud, showers over high ground, particularly in west.
  • 15. ENVI 1400 : Meteorology and Forecasting : lecture 5 15
  • 16. ENVI 1400 : Meteorology and Forecasting : lecture 5 16
  • 17. ENVI 1400 : Meteorology and Forecasting : lecture 5 17 L Arctic Maritime (mA) Source: Arctic seas / ice- cap. Very cold. Summer: Cold, frequent heavy showers. Winter: Very cold; strong winds from north and north- west. Heavy snow showers, particularly in north and coastal areas. Cold & bright in lake district and South Wales in lee of mountains to north. Track: short; warm & moist at surface, cold aloft; unstable
  • 18. ENVI 1400 : Meteorology and Forecasting : lecture 5 18
  • 19. ENVI 1400 : Meteorology and Forecasting : lecture 5 19
  • 20. ENVI 1400 : Meteorology and Forecasting : lecture 5 20 Maritime Tropical (mT) Origin: Oceanic subtropical high pressure cells – mid Atlantic (Azores High), much of pacific. 50% of southern hemisphere is a source of mT. High temperatures, and high humidity in lower layers. Stable or near neutral stratification. Modification of warm air is usually slow. Cooling from surface as air moves to higher latitudes results in formation of advection fog. If wind speed is high, mechanical mixing produces a deeper boundary layer (few hundred metres) and low stratiform cloud forms – stratus or stratocumulus. Forced ascent at land can result in thick cloud and heavy rain. Advection fog, Golden Gate Bridge
  • 21. ENVI 1400 : Meteorology and Forecasting : lecture 5 21 L H Track: moist at surface Maritime Tropical (mT) Source: warm tropical oceans Summer: Southwest winds; warm & sunny inland. Low stratus clouds round west coast. Winter: Stratus clouds/hill fog/drizzle clearing to the northeast. Warm, muggy, with prolonged rainfall in westerly mountains.
  • 22. ENVI 1400 : Meteorology and Forecasting : lecture 5 22
  • 23. ENVI 1400 : Meteorology and Forecasting : lecture 5 23
  • 24. ENVI 1400 : Meteorology and Forecasting : lecture 5 24 Continental Tropical (cT) Origin: Continental parts of subtropical high pressure cells (e.g. north Africa) or regions of generally light, variable winds & subsidence in upper troposphere over major landmasses during summer (e.g. central Asia). Strong solar heating of land mass results in unstable stratification and strong convection. Low humidity coupled with subsidence means limits cloud development and preciptitation. In the northern hemisphere winter, north Africa is the only source of cT. Modification during transit over water (e.g. from N. Africa moving over Mediterranean into Europe): picks up lots of water vapour, lowering the density of humidified air and triggering strong convection. Large cumulus and thunderstorms form.
  • 25. ENVI 1400 : Meteorology and Forecasting : lecture 5 25 L H Continental Tropical (cT) Source: North Africa – hot and dry. Summer only: Heatwave weather, hazy with occasional thunderstorm. Track: overland with short sea track
  • 26. ENVI 1400 : Meteorology and Forecasting : lecture 5 26
  • 27. ENVI 1400 : Meteorology and Forecasting : lecture 5 27
  • 28. ENVI 1400 : Meteorology and Forecasting : lecture 5 28 Summary • “Air masses” are large regions of air with distinct properties • Originate in high-pressure regions, and move towards low pressure • Modified by changes in surface properties, and radiative warming/cooling • Associated with different general weather conditions over UK