Combining two satellite cloud photographs of the eastern North Pacific separated by 18 hours in the spring of 1976 with concurrent weather measurements from the bridge of an oceanographic ship leads to the following propositions. Two clockwise curving long bands of clouds were each independently produced by cold air flowing south and pushing the warmer in situ air up and out of the way causing the clouds to form. The cloud bands are oriented roughly northeast/southwest with a separation of about 30 degrees of longitude at mid-latitudes. Curvature of the cloud bands is thought to be due to the Coriolis force acting on the southward flow. These conclusions could become more general if additional observations support them. A significant theoretical addition to an earlier discussion of the subject, regarding the time variability of approximately two days in the hypothesized circulation, is offered here along with a bit of confirming evidence from existing data. An old story with a new ending is presented.
Here are the dictionary definitions from the OED.
Climate: The prevailing atmospheric phenomena and conditions of temperature, humidity, wind etc. (of a country or region).
Weather: The condition of the atmosphere at a given place and time with respect to heat, cold, sunshine, rain, cloud, wind, etc.
Much confusion surrounds the two terms, climate and weather, as used singly and also when they are attempted to be coupled together. For example, recent news reports are claiming that currently climate changes, particularly the ever so gradual global warming, can cause extremes of local weather more often than existed before. Then logic gets left behind even as believers accumulate.
Start afresh with what may seem like a radical departure (or omission) from the dictionary definitions: both climate and weather are intimately linked to the sun’s influence and the earth’s heat balance requirement. Weather is connected to the daily variation of the sun either at a given location or by flows advected into that location from a place usually to the west. Climate is related to the fact that the sun constantly pours down radiation, absorbed in the oceans mostly but also in the atmosphere, and the sun never goes away. Time-scales of weather are much shorter than those of climate by several hundred times; estimates are one to a few days on the average for weather during the stormy season and considerably more than one year for climate.
Southern California’s climate, where I grew up, is steady and mild. Usually one nice day follows another. Some people, who have lived elsewhere, call it boring. Weather events are few and far between: no wind or rain at all in the summer. Total average yearly rainfall near the coast is ten inches, making the region close to being a desert. Two months of morning fog, which burns off by noon, occur between spring and summer. Occasionally warm dry Santa Anna winds come out of the east.
This type of climate is no accident. Just offshore of San Diego sits the North Pacific High Pressure Cell, which is a permanent atmospheric feature that affects local weather events by steering storms away, off to the north. In summer the size of the zone of high sea level pressure markedly swells up to the west, or there could be two cells side by side longitudinally. In either case rains coming from the ocean are completely shut out of the San Diego area by this high pressure system during summers.
What makes the North Pacific High a permanent feature? Thirty years of monthly mean sea level pressures for the whole North Pacific show the High at nearly the same location off California for every month. The published pressure data in my possession consist of five degree latitude/longitude means arranged in a diamond grid starting in 1946.
It has been hypothesized that the high pressure feature is caused by heat leaking out of a wide warm surface current slowly heading northeast off California [ 1 ]. Based on thirty years of sea surface temperatures, compiled from millions of individual ship-injection temperatures (but still unpublished), the warm current is believed to be permanent also, and the North pacific High sits right on top of it most of the time.
Contrast the summer climate of southern California with the one in northwest Iowa, over 1500 miles from the North Pacific, where I have spent more than the last thirty summers in the same small town. There a calm day is rare. Significant wind occurs almost all the time: switching direction from the south, then from the north, and back again every couple of days all summer. North winds out of Canada are cold and dry, those from the south are warm and humid. When they collide around our town, rain occurs.
Commonly noticed at certain times at a given location, during falls through springs, in San Diego for example, is the fact that after a rain storm has come and gone, the air feels colder than it was before. Also as the storm is approaching the air warms up (and the wind comes out of the southwest). Maybe it is the cold air that has somehow led to the production of rain in the first place.
Starting an explanation of weather near San Diego is not difficult. At any given time of the year and any time of day or night over the open North Pacific the air near the sea surface is colder in the north and warmer in the south, all at the same level: sea level. That is an unstable arrangement because the denser cold air always has the tendency to rush southward pushing the less dense warm air up and out of the way in the process. Since this rushing of cold air southward is not observed to occur all the time, evidently some sort of trigger mechanism starts things going when conditions are right. During the day the sun warms up the air, and it does so more at low latitudes and less at high latitudes thereby creating an enhanced north/south temperature gradient and increasing the potential for an instability to take place, possibly around noon. That is one potential trigger method.
In a more technical particular example,
the bridge of the ship every two hours are in my possession. Every weather feature measured and recorded changed dramatically starting at 8:00 am on March 30 compared to the day before: the wind turned around to blow out of the north with speeds up to 30 knots!, the air temperature steadily dropped 8 degrees F, pressure increased throughout the day, and the sea became rough with swell heights of 15 ft.
After the first rain storm hit the ship on March 30, the ship continued west and the second cloud band in
Much information is contained in
First, the eastern limbs of the cloud bands are long and coherent structures, and they always curve in the same way: clockwise as viewed from above. Many satellite photos since those in
What the ship’s weather measurements confirm is the eastern half of the circulation pattern outlined by the cloud bands: the air flows south initially and gradually turns westward. But exactly how the horizontal circulation is closed is not explained by extrapolating from these data and not by earlier discussions either, nor by the observed cloud bands because they start looking not so well defined in the western part of the loop. More work needs to be done in this area. Also how soon can the next circulation to the west form behind the first one? What are the necessary conditions?
In
Then a potentially counterintuitive proposal comes to mind, which is believed to be new in the present context. Taking it for granted that the Coriolis force bends the flows and thereby causes curves in the cloud bands, a slower flow speed should cause less curvature. As a direct consequence of that idea, deeper penetration of the colder air into lower latitudes should take place when the flow is slower.
If the slowing and speeding up of the southward rushing cold air flows alternated back and forth over several to many days, that could help explain, in a somewhat different way than previously considered, the approximate two-day oscillation in all the weather variables that came out of filtering analyses applied to the complete meteorological records of the oceanographic cruise of 35 days [ 4 ].
Finally, the whole concept behind this study is that the atmosphere is partially adjusting its heat balance by having colder air go south and warmer air return north. Then one wonders about the relative efficiency of the mainly two arrangements: slower flows of cold air going further south than faster bursts of cold air bottoming out at a higher latitudes. Which one is more effective?
In the spring of 1976 two rain storms that formed over the North Pacific were captured by two satellite photos taken 18 hours apart. They had the following characteristics: long relatively thin cloud bands curved clockwise, directed south at high latitudes and bending evermore westward as the latitude decreased. Inside the eastern cloud band at 35 N an oceanographic ship measured several weather variables every two hours including wind speeds up to 30 knots directed south, air temperatures decreasing, and barometric pressure increasing. Also rough seas and swells 15 feet high were detected. A logical deduction is that during this storm cold dry air rushed south pushing the warmer humid environmental air up and out of the way causing clouds. Also it is proposed that the direction of the winds was constantly changed by the Coriolis force resulting in the curvature of the cloud band. A second western cloud band in the photos was encountered by the ship a couple of days later and the weather measurements showed similar characteristics though somewhat less intensive with smaller maximum southward wind speeds. New is the prediction that slower southward flows of cold air should penetrate to lower latitudes than faster flows due to the weaker curving caused by the smaller Coriolis force.
It is reasonable to suppose that these results exhibit a more general phenomenon than just the two storms in one particular year. Verification in the future is awaited when more observations become available.