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MidLatitude Cyclone

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Large Concentration of Potential Energy. Fig. 12-5b, p. 313. Development of Low Pressure System ... Perturbation center for low pressure development ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: MidLatitude Cyclone


1
Mid-Latitude Cyclone
  • Dynamic Low Pressure
  • Transforming Potential to Kinetic Energy

2
Fig. 12-CO, p. 308
3
Overview
  • Air Mass Development
  • Stationary Front
  • Development of a Low Pressure System
  • Evolution of Frontal Systems
  • Life Cycle
  • Conversion of Energy
  • Relation to Upper Level

4
Air Masses
  • Likely Conflict of cP and mT
  • cP moves southward out of source region
  • Development of Stationary Front
  • Large Concentration of Potential Energy

5
Fig. 12-5b, p. 313
6
Development of Low Pressure System
  • Stationary Front is an Area of Slightly Lower
    Pressure
  • Perturbation center for low pressure
    development
  • Deepening pressure is dropping low pressure
    is Intensifying

7
Fig. 12-4, p. 313
8
Fig. 12-5a, p. 313
9
Evolution of Frontal Systems
  • Low Pressure Circulation Begins to Develop
  • Counter- clockwise motion begins to move the
    Stationary Front
  • To the West of the Low Cold Air Pushing into
    Warm (Cold Front)
  • The the East of the Low Warm Air Pushing into
    Cold (Warm front)

10
Fig. 12-1, p. 311
11
Cyclone Life Cycle
  • Successive Phase of Evolution and Intensity
  • Conversion of Potential Energy into Kinetic
    Energy
  • Stages of Life Cycle
  • Birth, Imature, Mature, Dissipating

12
Fig. 12-1, p. 311
13
Fig. 12-18, p. 325
14
Types Location of Weather
15
Fig. 12-13, p. 323
16
Fig. 12-16, p. 324
17
Fig. 1, p. 314
18
Fig. 12-15, p. 324
19
Upper Level Support
  • Dines Compensation Relation of Surface
    Pressure Systems to Upper Level
  • Convergence Divergence
  • Upper Level Flow Patterns and Air Masses

20
(No Transcript)
21
Fig. 3, p. 317
22
Fig. 12-6, p. 315
23
Fig. 12-10, p. 319
24
Fig. 12-7, p. 315
25
Fig. 12-12, p. 322
26
Fig. 12-8, p. 318
27
Cyclone Families
28
Fig. 12-2, p. 312
29
Fig. 12-3, p. 312
30
Fig. 12-25, p. 330
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