Meteorological Physical Background
There are typical situations in the thickness ridge ahead of Cold Fronts where MCSs develop quickly in the afternoon. In low and middle layers moist warm air is advected from the south or south-west which, together with the drier and colder air at upper levels, leads to potentially unstable stratification of the troposphere.
If such a situation occurs close to the Cold Front the effect is often increased by dry and cold air stream from behind the Cold Front overrunning the frontal zone at higher levels (see Thickness Ridge Cloudiness ).
The troposphere under such conditions is characterized by (see Key parameters ):
- a tongue of high values of equivalent potential temperature at a low level (usually at 850 hPa) representing moist, warm air
- warm advection in the lower and middle layers and cold advection above resulting in potentially unstable vertical stratification of the troposphere
- notable convergence in the lower layers (for instance from the surface up to 700 - 600 hPa), which is one process causing upward motion
- a rising warm conveyor belt throughout a thick layer of the troposphere
08 August 2004/18.00 UTC - Meteosat 8 IR 10.8 image; blue: thermal front parameter 500/850 hPa, green: equivalent thickness 500/850
hPa
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08 August 2004/18.00 UTC - Meteosat 8 IR 10.8 image; lines: thermal front parameter 500/850 hPa, red: temperature advection 700 hPa
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08 August 2004/18.00 UTC - Vertical cross section; black: isentropes (ThetaE)
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08 August 2004/18.00 UTC - Meteosat 8 IR10.8 image; magenta: relative streams 330K - system velocity: 260° 11 m/s, yellow:
isobars 330K, position of vertical cross section indicated
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The satellite images show a frontal system over the Iberian peninsula and France. The Cold Front extends from Gibraltar across Spain further
northwards. The above left image shows a pronounced TFP indicating the surface cold front. Ahead a narrow cloudband can be recognised as a warm
conveyor belt. The MCSs situated ahead of the surface cold front have developed along the warmer side of the high gradient of equivalent
thickness.
The above right image shows that the MCSs have developed within an area of WA within the lower and middle levels of the troposphere.
The relative streams are calculated on the isentropic surface of 330K.
The isentropic analysis shows that the MCSs have developed within the ascending relative stream (called upper relative stream). This relative
stream rises from approximately 500 hPa to 400 hPa within the area of MCS development.
08 August 2004/18.00 UTC - Vertical cross section; black: isentropes (ThetaE), magenta thin: divergence, magenta thick: convergence
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The vertical cross section shows a typical vertical distribution of the divergence field: there is pronounced convergence in front of the Cold Front in the lower levels of the troposphere up to approximately 600 hPa, and divergence aloft.
11 June 2004/18.00 UTC - Meteosat 8 IR 10.8 image; lines: blue: thermal front parameter 500/850 hPa, green: equivalent thickness
500/850 hPa
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11 June 2004/18.00 UTC - Meteosat 8 IR 10.8 image; lines: blue: thermal front parameter 500/850 hPa, red: temperature advection 700
hPa
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11 June 2004/18.00 UTC - Meteosat 8 IR 10.8 image; magenta: equivalent potential temperature 850 hPa
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The images above show the development of MCSs over Central Europe (Austria, Hungary and Romania). Other MCSs have developed above the Iberian
Peninsula and France. The MCSs over Austria, Hungary and Romania are situated ahead of a well-developed Cold Front.
In the above left image, the Cold Front is characterized by a pronounced TFP close to the leading edge of the front and a high gradient of
equivalent thickness within the cloud band (compare Cold Front). The MCSs have developed in the tongue of warm air ahead of the surface front
(maximum values of TFP) which is also indicated by the model by high values of equivalent thickness.
In the above right image, the temperature advection field mostly shows weak WA where the MCSs have developed.
The equivalent potential temperature at 850 hPa has a pronounced gradient within the Cold Front zone (lower left image). The MCSs can be found
along the warmer side of this high gradient where the equivalent potential temperature has a maximum.
11 June 2004/18.00 UTC - Meteosat 8 IR 10.8 image; position of vertical cross section indicated
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11 June 2004/18.00 UTC - Vertical cross section; black: isentropes (ThetaE), red temperature advection
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11 June 2004/18.00 UTC - Vertical cross section; black: isentropes (ThetaE), magenta: divergence
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The above diagrams show a cross section across the frontal cloud band and the MCSs which have developed ahead of the cloud band.
The isentropes area show an unstable stratified troposphere (decreasing values of equivalent potential temperature with height) within the the
lower layers of the troposphere up to approximately 700 hPa. WA can be found in the lower levels and CA in the upper levels of the troposphere
(above right image). The field of divergence (lower left image) does correspond to the ideal vertical distribution of divergence/convergence.
The area of the MCS is indicated by very strong converging motion at lower levels and weak divergence at middle levels of the troposphere.