The influence of multiple lake interactions upon lake-effect storms

被引:0
|
作者
Mann, GE
Wagenmaker, RB
Sousounis, PJ
机构
[1] NOAA, Natl Weather Serv, Forecast Off, White Lake, MI 48386 USA
[2] Univ Michigan, Ann Arbor, MI 48109 USA
关键词
D O I
10.1175/1520-0493(2002)130<1510:TIOMLI>2.0.CO;2
中图分类号
P4 [大气科学(气象学)];
学科分类号
0706 ; 070601 ;
摘要
Mesoscale disturbances in close proximity to one another typically undergo process interactions, which ultimately may result in the formation of a disturbance on the scale of the combined mesoscale disturbances. Embedded within this combined disturbance, some semblance of the incipient individual mesoscale disturbances may be preserved, especially in instances when the individual forcing mechanisms are fixed in space, as in the case of the Great Lakes. Studies have shown that during prolonged cold air outbreaks, collective lake disturbances can originate from the organization of individual lake-scale disturbances. These collective lake disturbances may, through scale interactions, alter the behavior of the contributing individual lake-scale disturbances and the embedded lake-effect storms. Factor separation decomposition of the Great Lakes system indicates that various interactions among lake-scale processes contribute to the overall development of the regional-scale disturbance, which can modulate embedded lake-effect snowbands. Contributions from these interactions tend to offset the individual lake contributions, especially during the development of the collective lake disturbance, but vary spatially and temporally. As the regional-scale disturbance matures, lake-lake interactions then accentuate the individual lake contributions. Specifically, the modulation of lake-effect snowbands was translational, intensional, and in some instances morphological in nature. Near Lake Michigan, processes attributed to Lake Superior (upstream lake) were direct and synergistic (indirect) resulting in a time delay of maximum snowfall intensity, while processes attributed to the downstream lakes were primarily synergistic resulting in an overall decrease in snowfall intensity. Furthermore, as the collective lake disturbance matured, Lake Superior-induced processes contributed to a significant morphological change in the Lake Michigan lake-effect snowbands.
引用
收藏
页码:1510 / 1530
页数:21
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [41] Sensitivity of Lake-Effect Snowfall to Lake Ice Cover and Temperature in the Great Lakes Region
    Wright, David M.
    Posselt, Derek J.
    Steiner, Allison L.
    MONTHLY WEATHER REVIEW, 2013, 141 (02) : 670 - 689
  • [42] Analysis of the Lake-Effect on Precipitation in the Taihu Lake Basin Based on the GWR Merged Precipitation
    Zhao, Jing
    Yang, Long
    Li, Lingjie
    Wang, Lachun
    Hu, Qingfang
    Wang, Yintang
    WATER, 2020, 12 (01)
  • [43] Observations of widespread lake-effect cloudiness: Influences of lake surface temperature and upwind conditions
    Kristovich, DAR
    Laird, NF
    WEATHER AND FORECASTING, 1998, 13 (03) : 811 - 821
  • [44] Eldora observations and numerical simulations of lake-effect convective evolution across Lake Michigan
    Kristovich, David A.R.
    Laird, Neil F.
    Hjelmfelt, Mark R.
    Conference on Radar Meteorology, 1999, : 545 - 548
  • [45] Winter Lightning to the Lee of Lake Ontario: The Lake-Effect Electrification (LEE) Field Campaign
    Steiger, Scott M.
    Bruning, Eric C.
    Chmielewski, Vanna C.
    Stano, Geoffrey
    Trostel, John
    Calhoun, Kristin M.
    Jesmonth, Kaitlyn R.
    Lamsma, Bee
    Lang, Timothy
    Laurinaitis, Shaun
    Losego, Jessica
    Ringhausen, Jacquelyn S.
    Stock, Michael
    Wang, Yonggang
    Waugh, Sean M.
    Weiss, Stephanie A.
    Weist, Thomas
    White, Thomas
    BULLETIN OF THE AMERICAN METEOROLOGICAL SOCIETY, 2024, 105 (11) : E2026 - E2046
  • [46] Orographic Influences on a Great Salt Lake-Effect Snowstorm
    Alcott, Trevor I.
    Steenburgh, W. James
    MONTHLY WEATHER REVIEW, 2013, 141 (07) : 2432 - 2450
  • [47] Contributions of Lake-Effect Periods to the Cool-Season Hydroclimate of the Great Salt Lake Basin
    Yeager, Kristen N.
    Steenburgh, W. James
    Alcott, Trevor I.
    JOURNAL OF APPLIED METEOROLOGY AND CLIMATOLOGY, 2013, 52 (02) : 341 - 362
  • [48] A Climatology of Easterly Wind Lake-Effect and Lake-Enhanced Precipitation Events over the Western Lake Superior Region
    Sandstrom, Joshua D.
    Cordeira, Jason M.
    Hoffman, Eric G.
    Metz, Nicholas D.
    JOURNAL OF APPLIED METEOROLOGY AND CLIMATOLOGY, 2023, 62 (04) : 529 - 545
  • [49] Representation of Lake-Atmosphere Interactions and Lake-Effect Snowfall in the Laurentian Great Lakes Basin among HighResMIP Global Climate Models
    Notaro, Michael
    Jorns, Jenna
    Briley, Laura
    JOURNAL OF THE ATMOSPHERIC SCIENCES, 2022, 79 (05) : 1325 - 1347
  • [50] Lake-aggregate mesoscale disturbances. Part V: Impacts on lake-effect precipitation
    Sousounis, PJ
    Mann, GE
    MONTHLY WEATHER REVIEW, 2000, 128 (03) : 728 - 745