학술논문

Seasonality of Continental Extratropical‐Cyclone Wind Speeds Over Northeastern North America.
Document Type
Article
Source
Geophysical Research Letters. 8/16/2022, Vol. 49 Issue 15, p1-9. 9p.
Subject
*WIND speed
*CYCLONES
*AUTUMN
*WINTER storms
*RICHARDSON number
*SURFACE roughness
Language
ISSN
0094-8276
Abstract
This study investigates the seasonality of near‐surface wind speeds associated with extratropical cyclones (ETCs) over northeastern North America using a global reanalysis data set during 1979–2020. As opposed to most studies that emphasize winter storms, ETCs during the fall exhibit significantly stronger 10‐m winds over this region due to the slightly stronger continental cyclones and significantly weaker low‐level stability during that time of the year. Also, ETCs favor inland lakes and Hudson Bay during the low‐ice‐content fall season, leading to lower surface roughness. Combining these results, we derive simple linear regressions to predict the 10‐m wind speed given three variables: 850‐hPa wind speed, low‐level Richardson number, and surface roughness length. This formula captures the observed seasonality and serves as a valuable tool for cyclone near‐surface wind risk assessment. Plain Language Summary: Extratropical cyclones can bring powerful winds that can cause severe damage to infrastructure. We find that cyclones with severe winds are the most frequent in the fall season over continental northeastern North America. Three reasons are found responsible: stronger continental cyclones, weaker low‐level atmospheric stability, and the lower surface roughness over lakes and Hudson Bay, where cyclones frequently occur in fall. A simple formula that can effectively assess the near‐surface wind speeds associated with cyclones is derived based on these results. Key Points: Extratropical‐cyclone‐associated 10‐m wind speeds are the strongest in the fall season over northeastern North AmericaBesides stronger continental cyclones and 850‐hPa winds, weaker low‐level stability in fall favors stronger 10‐m wind speeds in this regionLinear regression using 850‐hPa wind, Richardson number, and surface roughness well predicts cyclones' 10‐m wind speeds and seasonality [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]