1) TYPES OF
UPPER LEVEL CYCLONIC SYSTEMS
TUTT
SIGNATURES
Upper-level
cyclones normally have convergence into their centers producing downward
motion and clear skies. Divergence normally occurs along the periphery of the
cyclone with rising motions causing cloudy skies and precipitation. Over land,
however, convective activity is often present near the centers in the
afternoon when enough instability is produced by a combination of daytime
surface heating and the cold core of the upper-level low. The strongest
convection normally occurs along the western periphery ahead of
westward-moving cyclones (Source: NCEP).
TUTT
signatures can serve to either shear apart nearby tropical features, or act to
intensify the warm-core disturbance (if the center of the impulse drifts into
the difluent upper right pocket of the TUTT). These baroclinic systems can
also influence the steering of tropical waves and cyclones, depending on the
vertical structure of the warmer feature. There are also cases of merger
between the cold upper lows and the warmer counterparts, which may ultimately
result in a larger circulation and a greater threat for hurricane formation.
In a few scenarios, TUTT lows can give rise to subtropical or tropical
cyclones (where the upper low warms and convection wraps around the diminished
cold core, creating both vorticity and a surface
circulation.
A TUTT can
form at any time of the year. Greatest frequency of occurrence is in early and
late summer, between 5 deg and 35 deg N Latitude in the Northern Hemisphere.
The upper lows are easily discernible from concurrent warm-core disturbances,
exhibiting a comma shape in satellite views with non-symmetry of radar
echoes. Symptoms of apparent weather are heavy to severe thunderstorms in a
mainly diurnal time frame.



MESOSCALE COLD POOLS AND
DISTURBANCES (From: NOAA NWS Glossary)
See Also:
- CIMSS Case Study
Of MCC
-
-
- Mesoscale Convective Complex
-
- (abbrev. MCC)- MCC - Mesoscale Convective Complex. A large Mesoscale
Convective System (MCS), generally round or oval-shaped, which normally reaches
peak intensity at night. The formal definition includes specific minimum
criteria for size, duration, and eccentricity (i.e., "roundness"), based on the
cloud shield as seen on infrared satellite photographs: * Size: Area of cloud
top -32 degrees C or less: 100,000 square kilometers or more (slightly smaller
than the state of Ohio), and area of cloud top -52 degrees C or less: 50,000
square kilometers or more. * Duration: Size criteria must be met for at least 6
hours. * Eccentricity: Minor/major axis at least 0.7. MCCs typically form during
the afternoon and evening in the form of several isolated thunderstorms, during
which time the potential for severe weather is greatest. During peak intensity,
the primary threat shifts toward heavy rain and flooding.
- Mesoscale Convective System
- (MCS): A complex of thunderstorms which becomes organized on a scale
larger than the individual thunderstorms, and normally persists for several
hours or more. MCSs may be round or linear in shape, and include systems such as
tropical cyclones, squall lines, and MCCs (among others). MCS often is used to
describe a cluster of thunderstorms that does not satisfy the size, shape, or
duration criteria of an MCC.
-
TRANS-RIDGE WEAKNESSES
In some cases during the
warmer months, the gap or cleavage between two existing subtropical highs can
form an alley of cyclonic shear or even circulation. Termed a weakness, this
corridor can serve to steer smaller features, such as an MCC or a tropical
cyclone. Often in summer, the weakness will be home to pockets of cold air that
increase the potential for diurnal and/or seabreeze convection. Continental
thunderstorm groupings may drop into discontinuity (a phenomenon seen many times
in late spring and summer over the lower Great Plains in 2007). The best way to
view a weakness is by examining water vapor imagery. There are cases of
breaching, however, where a weakening anticyclone is broken apart by upstream or
lower latitude cyclonic systems, thus opening up a new pathway for disturbances
to gravitate to higher latitudes. 
SHORTWAVES
A shortwave is the
smallest type of upper level disturbances in the synoptic scale. These impulses
are also the fastest moving at the 500MB level, at least until encountering
blocking features and amplification trends aloft. Energy tends to be distributed
in a linear fashion, accounting for precipitation being limited to a narrow
stretch in the cold and overrunning sectors of the cyclone (although convective
displays can and do occur close to the frontal structure). Distortion of the
500MB height contours is usually in a flattened "U" signature embedded within
the westerlies. An example of this type of disturbance can be found in
association with the February 3 1976 Arctic outbreak in the U.S., where two
distinct impulses are found rotating through a mean trough
complex.
In a few situations, the
upper system may be quite intense, displaying a closed core about a small
geographic area. These cyclones are termed mega-shortwaves, and are in essence
major storms confined to a more compact coverage. A classic case was the
February 19 1979 "President's Day Storm" which buried sections of the Virginias
and Mid-Atlantic states with as much as three feet of
snow.
TROUGH-TYPE CYCLONES
Areas of low pressure that
form along a non-centered upper disturbance are termed trough-type cyclones. If
the surface system accompanies a full-latitude trough (or complex) and has
sufficient moisture and instability to work with, widespread intense convection
can result. This was the case with the Nov 11 2001 tornado outbreak across the
Midwest, which occurred without a singular 500MB vorticity maximum but rather in
association with a linear spread of energy stretching from northern Mexico to
Ontario. 
HYBRID-TYPE STORMS
"Hybrid-type" storms are so called
because they combine the progressive nature of a trough with the energy and
abundant upper dynamics associated with closed 500MB lows. There may or may
not be a closed contour in the upper level height display. But the extent of
these systems is always synoptic-scale, with precipitation and cloud arrays
covering a wide geographic area that at some point can cover most of the U.S. as
well as portions of Canada and Mexico.
A hybrid disturbance can
produce astounding amounts of severe weather, as evidenced by such events as the
Nov 15 1989 (see graphic above), April 3 1974, and April 11 1965 outbreaks.
Frozen precipitation tends to occur over a lesser time frame, given the tendency
for linear advection of vorticity at the upper levels. The hallmark
of these storms is the well-defined satellite signature of the cold front
associated with the low.

LONGWAVE
LOWS
A storm falls into the
"longwave" category when its representation at 500MB is closed,
semicircular and alters the atmospheric height field to its north and east
(that is, creates ridges through warm advection aloft). Another characteristic
of a longwave low is slow motion and concentrated areas of precipitation within
the cold and overrunning sectors. The core of vorticity is very intense, yet
compact, and is more supportive of stratiform rain and snow to the immediate
north and west of the surface low center. As an example, the Feb 23 1977 storm
shown above had blizzard conditions and thundersnow in Goodland KS, while Hays
KS 100 miles to the east saw sunshine and 60 deg (albeit with very strong
straight-line winds).
2) COMMON STORM
TRACKS OF MIDLATITUDE CYCLONES
BORDER
TRACKERS
Region Of
Cyclogenesis: British Columbia
Lowest Range Of Central
Pressure At Surface: 988 to 1000MB
Forward Speed:
Rapid; coast to coast sequence within 72 hours
Season of
Occurrence: Any
500MB Structure: Shortwave or Hybrid; transitional
from semizonal to amplifying trough; one of the most common types of storm
track
Associated Sensible
Weather: High winds along and north of 40 N Latitude; very strong warm
advection along and south of storm track; precipitation usually sparse within
the warm sector, except in cases during the "January Thaw"; Border Tracker
storms in mid-January may draw in deep tropical moisture from the Gulf of
Mexico, resulting in widespread overrunning and convective rainfall along and to
the right of the trajectory of lowest surface pressure falls. Locales close to
the actual storm track may see mixed or icing precipitation, with snowfall
relegated to Canadian communities affected by the disturbance. Storms of this
track type can be prolific severe thunderstorm producers in southern Canada and
the northern Great Plains during the summer months.
Classic Case: The
severe weather outbreak of June 22 - 25, 2007 across the Prairie Provinces and
Ontario (see footage of EF
5 cell at Elie MB June 23, 2007 here) was in relation to a
northern variant of a Border Tracker cyclone.





ALBERTA
CLIPPERS
Region Of
Cyclogenesis: Alberta Or Montana
Lowest Range Of Central
Pressure At Surface: 982 to 1018MB
Forward Speed:
Rapid; cross-continent sequence within 72 hours
Season of
Occurrence: November 15 to April 1
500MB Structure: Shortwave in conjunction with
vortex over Hudson Bay or James Bay
Associated Sensible
Weather: One of the most misunderstood of all storm tracks. A true
Alberta Clipper exhibits a rapid and parabolic motion. Accompanied by sudden
deepening and intense winds at most levels of the atmosphere to the right of the
Rocky Mountains. While moisture may be lacking, a typical "Clipper" can generate
ground blizzards with rapid advection of cold air along and in the wake of its
passage. Cold and overrunning sector snowfall is usually about 1 - 3
inches, although maximum amounts of 8 inches are not unheard of. Unlike many
mid-latitude cyclones in North America, the heaviest snow is generally seen
along and just north of the path of maximum vorticity at
500MB.
Some systems of the Clipper type
may produce sleet and freezing rain in the overrunning sector, especially those
storms that take the traditional track through MO into S QC. Prolonged wedge
episodes may result with anywhere from 1 to 6 hours of icing or glazing in parts
of Appalachia and the Interstate 95 corridor above Washington DC.
Variations In The Storm
Track: There can
be a wide range of deviations from the traditional Alberta Clipper trajectory.
Some "clippers" imitate the "Border Tracker" type after formation. Another
subfamily may take a further south and east path, with potential for center
jumping or secondary cyclogenesis in the vicinity of the VA Tidewater. This
option may present risks of moderate or heavy snowfall to the Mid-Atlantic and
New England states, using the Atlantic Ocean as a moisture source while cA
values infiltrate the northwest quadrant of the low. All disturbances of the
Alberta Clipper family have two things in common: the lows are produced by
leeside redevelopment and the upper level component is steered in some way by a
cPk, cA, or cAk gyre over ON, MB, or Hudson Bay.
Classic Case:
Occasionally the southern variant of the Alberta Clipper can produce
near-blizzard conditions with heavy snows. Witness the January 22 - 24, 2005
storm that formed over S AB before taking an east-southeast path into the VA
Capes. As for a "traditional" Clipper track, the January 28, 1977 blizzard
affecting the lower Great Lakes stands out as an example of this type that can
trigger extreme lake-effect and lake-related snowfall, escorted by bitter cold
air from northern Canada.