MetLink Summary 25 Jan 1999
(Day 1)


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School Weather News 1999


Weather analysis - 25 Jan 1999


From: "Malcolm Walker"
Subject: MetLinkInternational
Day 1 Date: Mon, 25 Jan 1999 20:55:23 -0000

Dear MetLink participants

Well done! Day 1 of MetLink's active phase has gone better than I dared hope. I am using a whirling psychrometer at the RMS to measure air temperature and wet-bulb temperature and a sensitive hand-held anemometer to measure wind speed. I have a wind-direction indicator close by in the form of a flag on the top of a nearby shopping centre. I have no rain gauge and I have no means of measuring maximum and minimum temperature. As I said in an earlier e-mail, the Society is close to the centre of a big town, so that must be borne in mind when interpreting my observations.

I had one query about correcting pressure to sea level: to do this, you should take your station pressure and add 1 mb for every 10 metres you are above sea level. Thus, for a station pressure of 1005 mb and a height of 120 metres above sea level, add 120/10 = 12 mb, making a sea-level pressure of 1017 mb.

So ..... what have we found on this first day? Well .... what a contrast of temperature! For those with a temperature of -20 deg C, it must have seemed quite a good idea to jump on an aeroplane and fly south to the warmth and sunshine of southern Africa. But what of the weather situations?

Firstly, in western Europe:- As you will have seen if you have been looking at the weather charts prepared by the British Meteorological Office (for their Web address, see Contact Message No.4), we have today had a belt of low pressure all the way from southern Greenland to Finland, with a slow-moving area of low pressure just off south-east Greenland. This filled from about 980 mb at 0000 GMT to about 985 mb at 1200. A small area of low pressure moved quickly across northern Britain towards Scandinavia. It was near Larne at 0000 GMT and over Denmark by 1200 GMT. On its southern flank, there has been quite a wide warm sector containing a moist airflow from the west-south-west. An eastward-moving cold front oriented from north-east to south-west gave a short burst of heavy rain as it passed (over Reading just after 10 am). The stations in Finland were east of the belt of low pressure and have therefore been affected by a south-easterly flow which carried bitterly cold air over them from western Russia. The reason for the reported wind directions at the schools in Finland is that they were, at the time, in the circulation of a small low which passed quite quickly over them.

MetLink friends in southern Norway and southern Sweden: I hope we didn't send you too much snow or rain when the low which passed over northern Britain during the morning of 25th reached you.

And what of the schools in Spain and Malta? According to the weather charts, there has been a centre of high pressure of 1035 mb over Spain today and a flow from the east or north-east over Malta. The weather report from Tarragona gave the impression of a nice day. By the way, Tarragona: please will you tell us something about the tramontana. I remember one March day about ten years ago being at an oil terminal near Tarragona in a wind averaging 45 kts with gusts to 60 kts. It all seemed rather odd to me, accustomed as I was to winds that strong bringing cloud and rain and fallen trees. That day near Tarragona, there wasn't a cloud in the sky and the wind was warm.

And now to Madagascar, Zambia and Zimbabwe: Peterhouse - please will you tell us what caused the 31 mm of rain. Was it the thunder- showers mentioned in the Zimbabwe Met Service's weather bulletin? And Antananarivo had 26 mm of rain. Thundershowers? At both places, what time of day did the rain fall, and how usual or unusual was the rain? How near normal are the temperatures you had on 25th? The Meteosat image D6 (infra-red) images give the impression of tropical convection. Is that so?

Here are some additional Web addresses for meteorological information from southern Africa:

http://www.intellicast.com/weather/africa

http://cirrus.sawb.gov.za/ the latter being the home page of the South African Weather Bureau.

For a weather chart of the South Atlantic, you should visit: http://cirrus.sawb.gov.za/www/ship/ship.gif

Today's weather chart shows that Tristan da Cunha has been enjoying high pressure (1025 mb), centred just to the north-west of the island. When interpreting weather maps from the southern hemisphere, please remember that winds blow clockwise around low pressure centres in the southern hemisphere, anti-clockwise around them in the northern hemisphere.

What will tomorrow bring? The British Meteorological Office forecast chart for 1200 GMT on 26th suggests: bitterly cold weather with easterly winds in Finland; cloudy with some snow or rain in southern Sweden and southern Norway; west-north-west winds, with showers (?), at Edinburgh and Larne; moist westerly winds across southern Britain; a cold front close to Bilbao; and light west to north-west winds at Tarragona and Malta.

Something similar to today seems likely for Zambia, Zimbabwe and Madagascar. I'm afraid I haven't found a forecast for Tristan da Cunha.

That's all for today. What will tomorrow bring?!


DTOT Meteosat image 25 Jan 1999



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