
Here's the link...http://www.cmdl.noaa.gov/hotitems/watervapor.html
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benny wrote:that's in the stratosphere... above most hurricanes.
curtadams wrote:benny wrote:that's in the stratosphere... above most hurricanes.
The troposphere extends up to about 15 km in latitudes where hurricanes form http://www-das.uwyo.edu/~geerts/cwx/not ... tropo.html So part of the chart - the part with the largest increase in water vapor, even - is very definitely in the troposphere and encompassed by most hurricanes.
benny wrote:that's in the stratosphere... above most hurricanes.
Jim Hughes wrote:benny wrote:that's in the stratosphere... above most hurricanes.
It's important in my opinion and I even wrote about this in a discussion last fall .
"Stratopshere, Ozone, and how this effects the AMO Cycle"
http://www.storm2k.org/phpbb2/viewtopic.php?t=78570
Jim
benny wrote:Jim Hughes wrote:benny wrote:that's in the stratosphere... above most hurricanes.
It's important in my opinion and I even wrote about this in a discussion last fall .
"Stratopshere, Ozone, and how this effects the AMO Cycle"
http://www.storm2k.org/phpbb2/viewtopic.php?t=78570
Jim
Whoa. Now that's a long post. Could you dissect it into smaller chunks? What is the main point (couple paragraphs or so)? I'm not a solar expert but it seems like the solar stuff has some 'hand-waving' element to it that I'm not as comfortable with. Though the same argument could be made for seasonal hurricane forecasting!FYI the AO has been very negative this winter.. but I can't tell what you are trying to argue there. There was a significant Stratospheric warming in January which I think was the final warming.. I couldn't understand your post though.
Jim Hughes wrote:benny wrote:Jim Hughes wrote:benny wrote:that's in the stratosphere... above most hurricanes.
It's important in my opinion and I even wrote about this in a discussion last fall .
"Stratopshere, Ozone, and how this effects the AMO Cycle"
http://www.storm2k.org/phpbb2/viewtopic.php?t=78570
Jim
Whoa. Now that's a long post. Could you dissect it into smaller chunks? What is the main point (couple paragraphs or so)? I'm not a solar expert but it seems like the solar stuff has some 'hand-waving' element to it that I'm not as comfortable with. Though the same argument could be made for seasonal hurricane forecasting!FYI the AO has been very negative this winter.. but I can't tell what you are trying to argue there. There was a significant Stratospheric warming in January which I think was the final warming.. I couldn't understand your post though.
Well you would have to read the stratosphere discussions that I gave the URL's for to follow what I am talking about. They have time frame references and graphs about the different types of stratopsheric warmings.
What's my point basically ? I believe that the changes in the stratopshere might be as important as any other oceanic and atmospheric telecconection in regards to weather and climate patterns.
As far as this past January's stratospheric warming. I was one of the first to give a heads up about it, anywhere. I even used it's relationship in my snowstorm forecast for the 14th-16th of February.
Not to sure what you mean by hand waving in reference to solar stuff . I realize some of this is controversial but I started writing about this way before I wrote that discussion. If you go back you can find how I walked everyone through these space weather variables as they were unfolding.
If anyone actually monitored space weather last year they would have noticed how the tropics changed during the presence of certain space weather variables . Does this mean that there is definitely a relationship?
No but it's a start in the right direction of a promising forecasting methodology. At least in my opinion. Let's see what happens again this year. Mind you last year's discussions were not the first by any means. But it was for 99% of the people at Storm2k.
Jim
benny wrote:
Again I guess I miss the point. Are you saying that the cooling of the stratosphere is responsible for the AMO? Is that just a signal reflecting the changes over the last 10 years? I think it is all important but it is a question of scale... is the cooling of the northern pole in the stratosphere a reflection of something else.. the warming of the earth perhaps? this might deserve a different thread. I just couldn't follow what you were proposing in that long thread as it was too choppy and didn't seem to make a lot of sense.. perhaps it just flew over my head!
The January SW was an interesting event. The cold signal was much delayed from average and it really didn't end up being that cold in general. Something prevented it from really being a significant weather player... though it certainly contributed to the east coast snowstorm in mid Feb. The SW was followed by a strong cooling aloft which coincided with the westerlies dropping to 30 mb and below in the QBO belt. I certainly looked like they were related at least. I think this has been the strongest E QBO phase ever recorded in the way that CPC defines it. In a hypothetical way.. how do you think the transition to west phase will affect the summer pattern and/or hurricanes? I'll just pick up little tidbits of what you are saying along the way.. it is an area in need of more study. I find it fascinating that the strong stratospheric cooling.. and associated cool temps aloft plus easterly wind anomalies.. never worked their way into the troposphere like they typical do or have just recently done so:
http://www.cpc.ncep.noaa.gov/products/p ... o.cdas.gif
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