The technique of relative-flow analysis on isentropic surfaces is used to examine the large- (“synoptic”-) scale situations associated with selected severe local storms near southern England and over the mid-western U.S.A. (including the Horsham, Woking- ham, and Geary storms whose behaviour has been described in several previous publi- cations). The storms occur ahead of major troughs, in the vicinity of confluence-lines (usually recognised a8 cold fronts over western Europe but as “dry-lines’’ over the U.S.A.), where an increase of wind with height favours the organisation and intensi- fication of cumulonimbus convection. Extreme instability arises where small-scale convection is confined to a lowermost 1 or 2 km (leading to an abnormally high wet- bulb potential temperature) beneath a plume of very warm air lying downwind of an extensive arid plateau (Spain or Mexico). The instability is released where the (backed) low-level flow eventually reaches the edge of the restraining plume aloft. It appears that the occurrence of severe local storms demands a peculiarly favourable combination of geographical features and atmospheric flow-pattern.
CITATION STYLE
Carlson, T. N., & Ludlam, F. H. (1968). Conditions for the occurrence of severe local storms. Tellus A: Dynamic Meteorology and Oceanography, 20(2), 203. https://doi.org/10.3402/tellusa.v20i2.10002
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