Has 2013 gotten off to a wet start?

If you’ve had any lingering suspicion that 2013 has gotten off to an amazingly wet start, that suspicion can now be confirmed. As of April 24, both Madison and Milwaukee have recorded the wettest start to a calendar year ever.

Milwaukee recorded 15.19 inches of liquid-equivalent precipitation, just outpacing the prior record of 15.08 inches set in 1976. Madison recorded 13.45 inches of liquid equivalent through April 24, breaking the former record of 13.30 inches set in 1973.

It does appear that the faucet will be turned down at least for the next week or so, though occasional showery days still seem to be in the near future.

What is causing the persistent snowy/rainy pattern that we have endured these past couple of months? The answer to such questions regarding the behavior of the atmosphere is not often easy to uncover, and a lot of effort must be spent after the fact looking for explanations.

One of the most satisfying aspects of studying atmospheric science is that interesting questions come up all the time. It is easy to remain motivated to keep thinking.

Pursuing such questions invariably leads to new insights about a variety of other weather phenomena that were not originally part of the research project.

When you hear people talk about the importance of “basic research,” this is what they mean: that by pursuing question A, a curious mind will stumble upon answer B and that answer may lead to the development of brand new insights about nature. Study of this wet beginning to 2013 will almost surely yield unintended new insights as well.

Category: Seasons

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How cold and wet has Spring been in Madison?

An incredible late winter/early spring of colder-than-normal temperatures and above-normal precipitation continued unabated last week.

Through April 17, Madison had recorded 12.95 inches of liquid equivalent precipitation for the calendar year. That means that 2013 has gotten off to the third wettest start in Madison history. Milwaukee has received 13.15 inches of liquid equivalent this year, also making it the third wettest start to a year.

Both cities trail only 1876 and 1974 in the record books.

As far as temperature goes, Madison is running 4 degrees below normal for April. This is in the wake of a February and March that were 2 degrees and

7.4 degrees colder than normal. A similar set of circumstances has affected Milwaukee where February was 1.8 degrees below normal and March was 5 degrees below the average.

The bottom line is, we are well overdue for the arrival of warmth.

Even Major League Baseball has suffered from the incessant rain, posting an unusually large number of rained-out games in April (13 so far) in an era when the rainout is less likely because of domed stadiums.

The good news is the medium-range forecasts issued by the National Center for Environmental Prediction suggest warmth is coming. It appears that by the end of this week we will finally be looking at bona fide warm spring days.

Category: Seasons

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What is the jet stream all about?

The jet stream is a ribbon of high wind speeds near the top of the troposphere (about 6 miles above the surface of the Earth). The major jet streams flow west to east. The existence of fast winds moving from west to east was long suspected because of the movement of storms, cloud systems and volcanic debris high in the atmosphere.

Suspicions remained unconfirmed until World War II. During major U.S. air raids against Japan, the B-29 airplanes flew from east to west at altitudes of 10 kilometers, where they encountered a strong stream of westerly winds that slowed or even stopped the planes in mid-air. There were also balloon observations made in the early to mid-1920s by Wasaburo Ooishi, the first director of Japan’s upper-air observatory, that suggested these fast moving winds.

Today’s weather reports often discuss the position of the jet stream. The jet stream position is strongly tied to the southern edge of the dome of cold air centered on the North Pole. During the depths of winter, that cold dome expands considerably, extending nearly to the Gulf of Mexico. As the winter ends and spring approaches, the hemisphere begins to warm up and the cold dome shrinks dramatically. Its southern edge moves to central Canada by early summer.

The jet stream is associated with vigorous upward and downward vertical motions. The upward vertical motions are instrumental in producing thunderstorms. Thus, when the jet stream migrates northward as the weather warms in spring/summer, so does the greatest concentration of severe weather outbreaks. That season is heading our way, denoted by designating this week as Tornado and Severe Weather Awareness Week, with a drill day planned from 1 to 2 pm. on Thursday.

Category: Meteorology
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Was March colder than normal?

Nearly everyone is happy to see March 2013 end, as it was an unusually persistent cold month. In fact, Madison ended up 7.4 degrees below normal for March 2013 making it the 18th coldest March in the city’s history. Madison had only four days when the average temperature was at or above normal. Of course, March 2013 followed on the heels of the warmest March ever in March 2012 when the daily average temperature was 16.1 degrees above normal.

That means that consecutive months of March (2012 and 2013) had a 23.5-degree difference in their average daily temperatures — surely some sort of record for the same month in consecutive years (we are still trying to verify if this is, in fact, a record).

Leaving the issue of records aside, it is interesting to note the local departure from normal is not necessarily in line with the departure over the whole Northern Hemisphere. In fact, while we were basking in warmth last March, the hemisphere was colder than average, and while we were shivering this March, the hemisphere was warmer than average. Little consolation for those tired of winter.

However, it must be noted that the transition from March to April in Madison is accompanied by the single biggest one-month increase in average daily temperature of the year (from 34 degrees in March to 46.6 degrees in April). If April unfolds more or less normally, the inevitable warming will not only be especially welcome but will seem especially strong.

Category: Climate
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What is an “atmospheric river”?

An atmospheric river is a term used to describe a relatively narrow region in the atmosphere that transports water vapor outside of the tropics northward. They are typically a few thousand miles long and 100 miles wide. There can be three to five of these “rivers” at any time covering the hemisphere.

Atmospheric rivers are apparent in satellite images and are often in the vicinity of fronts over the oceans. They transport large amounts of water. Atmospheric rivers that transport water vapor from Hawaii to North America are sometimes nicknamed the “pineapple express.”

While these atmospheric rivers are made of water in the gas form, or water vapor, they can carry as much water as a dozen Mississippi Rivers. The features can transport water into storms and result in extreme precipitation events that cause severe flooding in western coastal regions of the world, including the West Coast of North America.

In early December 2012, San Francisco received about 10 inches of rain from water vapor transported across the Pacific Ocean by one of these rivers of vapor. While some of these events lead to flooding and mud slides, most precipitation events simply provide beneficial precipitation important to a region’s water supply.

Because of these features’ importance to the water supply of a region, their movements are important to follow and forecast. They are monitored using satellite measurements, aircraft reconnaissance and a new set of instruments along the coast of California. These observations, combined with better numerical modeling, will likely improve forecasts that eventually will help improve water management.

Category: Meteorology
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