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Warm Season Climatology of Convective Evolution Over the Coastal Northeast U.S. Michael Charles and Brian A. Colle Institute for Terrestrial and Planetary Sciences SUNY at Stony Brook Jeffrey Tongue NOAA/NWS Upton, NY. Forecasting Northeast coastal convection is very difficult….
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Warm Season Climatology of Convective Evolution Over the Coastal Northeast U.S. Michael Charles and Brian A. Colle Institute for Terrestrial and Planetary Sciences SUNY at Stony Brook Jeffrey Tongue NOAA/NWS Upton, NY
Forecasting Northeast coastal convection is very difficult… False Alarm Rate (FAR) = Unverified warnings/total warnings (Svr tstm/torn.) ALY, BOX, OKX, and PHI from 1/1/1986 – 10/16/2003
Motivational Questions • What is the change in thunderstorm distribution in the Northeast from early to late summer? • How do thunderstorms evolve as they approach the coast? • Under what conditions does more significant convection occur at the coast even with cooler early summer SSTs?
Background • Last year’s NROW talk: • Northeast lightning climatology (2000-2002) • Concluded that a coastal gradient existed in June, but not in August. • Hypothesized that the cooler June SST’s lead to a relatively cool marine boundary layer that weakens convection approaching the coast. • This year’s research: • Included two more years (2003-2004). • Investigate the inter-annual variability in the lightning distribution – Is SST the whole story?
Sea Surface Temperatures 15 June 2000 15 August 2000
Average Lightning Distributions Terrain June 2000-2004 August 2000-2004 50 m 100 m 200 m 400 m 600 m 800 m Strikes per 100 km2 per month Strikes per 100 km2 per month
June – Sharp coastal gradient Terrain June 2000 June 2004 50 m 100 m 200 m 400 m 600 m 800 m Strikes per 100 km2 Strikes per 100 km2
June – More significant coastal lightning Terrain 50 m 100 m 200 m 400 m 600 m 800 m June 2002 June 2003 Strikes per 100 km2 Strikes per 100 km2
August – Sharp coastal gradient Terrain 50 m 100 m 200 m 400 m 600 m 800 m August 2002 August 2004 Strikes per 100 km2 Strikes per 100 km2
August – More significant coastal lightning Terrain 50 m 100 m 200 m 400 m 600 m 800 m August 2000 August 2001 Strikes per 100 km2 Strikes per 100 km2
Synoptic climatology • Cases: • Lightning cases defined as days that New Jersey, southeast New York or Connecticut received >10 lightning strikes. • Divided convection into two categories: • Near Front (Frontally maintained, referred to as frontal) • Along surface cold front (< 100 km ahead) • Less than 200 km ahead of surface warm front • Non-frontally maintained (referred to as pre-frontal) • Propagates or develops > 100 km ahead of a cold front • > 200 km ahead of a surface warm front • Both types of convection were summed into monthly totals for each year
Non-frontal: 11-12 June 2000 case storms ~100 km 00 UTC 12th NCEP sfc. analysis 00 UTC 12th OKX sounding CAPE=258 J/kg
Non-frontal: 11-12 June 2000 case Terrain 50 m 100 m 200 m 400 m 600 m 800 m 11 June 2000 Lightning Strikes (per 100 km2)
Frontal: 27-28 August 2001 storms ~100 km 00 UTC 28th NCEP sfc. analysis 00 UTC 28th OKX sounding CAPE=793 J/kg
Frontal: 27-28 August 2001 Terrain 50 m 100 m 200 m 400 m 600 m 800 m 21 August 2004 Lightning Strikes (per 100 km2)
June average lightning distribution Terrain 50 m 100 m 200 m 400 m 600 m 800 m Frontal convection Pre-frontal convection Strikes per 100 km2 per month Strikes per 100 km2 per month
August average lightning distribution Terrain 50 m 100 m 200 m 400 m 600 m 800 m Frontal convection Pre-frontal convection Strikes per 100 km2 per month Strikes per 100 km2 per month
June - Little coastal lightning 2000 2000 2004 2004
June – Significant coastal lightning 2002 2002 2003 2003
August - Little coastal lightning 2002 2002 2004 2004
August – Significant coastal lightning 2000 2000 2001 2001
Conclusions • There are large spatial gradients in lightning (convection) across the Northeast U.S. because of terrain (e.g. Wasula et al. 2002) and land-sea contrasts. • The relatively cool SST’s in the early summer can lead to rapid weakening of convection near the coast, but there is a lot of inter-annual variability. • The rapid weakening of coastal convection is favored for prefrontal (propagating) convection. Convection supported by a surface cold/warm front weakens less approaching the coast. • Those months with significant lightning near the coast have more anomalous upper-level troughing around the U.S. Eastern Seaboard.
Future Work • Convective mode: • Convection divided into two convective modes: • Organized/long-lived • Disorganized/short-lived • Determine the processes which favor more long-lived convection near the coast during warm season frontal passages. Is the convection more elevated? • Mesoscale modeling of specific cases at < 5-km grid spacing using WRF.