The Relationship Between Extratropical Cyclone Steering and Blocking Along the North American East Coast

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Abstract

The path and speed of extratropical cyclones along the east coast of North America influence their societal impact. This work characterizes the climatological relationship between cyclone track path and speed, and blocking and the North Atlantic Oscillation (NAO). An analysis of Lagrangian cyclone track propagation speed and angle shows that the percentage of cyclones with blocks is larger for cyclones that propagate northward or southeastward, as is the size of the blocked region near the cyclone. Cyclone-centered composites show that propagation of cyclones relative to blocks is consistent with steering by the block: northward tracks more often have a block east/northeast of the cyclone; slow tracks tend to have blocks due north of the cyclone. Comparison with the NAO shows that to first-order blocking and the NAO steer cyclones in a similar manner. However, blocked cyclones are more likely to propagate northward, increasing the likelihood of cyclone related impacts.

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Booth, J. F., Dunn-Sigouin, E., & Pfahl, S. (2017). The Relationship Between Extratropical Cyclone Steering and Blocking Along the North American East Coast. Geophysical Research Letters, 44(23), 11,976-11,984. https://doi.org/10.1002/2017GL075941

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