Abstract

Cold fronts are a primary feature of the day-to-day variability of weather in the midlatitudes, and feature in conceptual extratropical cyclone models alongside the dry intrusion airstream. Here the climatological frequency and spatial distribution of the co-occurrence of these two features are quantified, and the differences in cold front characteristics (intensity, size, and precipitation) when a dry intrusion is present or not are calculated. Fronts are objectively identified in the ECMWF ERA-Interim dataset for the winter seasons in each hemisphere and split into three sub-types: central fronts (within a cyclone area); trailing fronts (outwith the cyclone area but connected to a central front); and isolated fronts (not connected to a cyclone). These are then associated with dry intrusions identified using Lagrangian trajectory analysis. Trailing fronts are most likely to be associated with a DI in both hemispheres, and this occurs more frequently in the western parts of the major storm track regions. Isolated fronts are linked to DIs more frequently on the eastern ends of the storm tracks, and in the subtropics. All front types, when co-occurring with a DI, are stronger in terms of their temperature gradient, are much larger in area, and typically have higher average precipitation. Therefore, climatologically the link with DIs increases the impact of cold fronts. There are some differences in the statistics of the precipitation for trailing and isolated fronts that are further investigated in Part II of this study from the front-centred perspective.

Highlights

  • Extratropical cyclones and their associated warm and cold fronts are primary features for controlling the variability of weather in the midlatitudes

  • The cold fronts were separated into three types; central fronts that occur within a cyclone area, trailing fronts that are outside of any cyclone area but are connected to central fronts, and isolated fronts that are not linked to cyclones

  • We have been able to show that all types of fronts that are associated with Dry intrusions (DIs) are stronger in terms of their wet bulb potential temperature gradient than other fronts

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Summary

Introduction

Extratropical cyclones and their associated warm and cold fronts are primary features for controlling the variability of weather in the midlatitudes. Parfitt et al (2017a) compared a front diagnostic using both temperature gradient and relative vorticity at 600 hPa (F diagnostic), with a thermal front parameter diagnostic similar to Berry et al (2011) on 600 hPa (T diagnostic), and found that in the western ocean basins, relatively more fronts were identified with the F than the T diagnostic, whereas in the eastern ocean basins, the opposite is true This may reflect the lifecycles of the extratropical cyclones and the changing characteristics of fronts across the ocean basins.

Reanalysis data
Dry intrusion identification
Cyclone identification
Defining front object types
Statistics and characteristics of matched cold fronts and DIs
Global distribution of matched cold fronts and DIs
Statistical distributions of front intensities
Statistical distributions of front size
Statistical distributions of frontal precipitation
Characteristics of fronts in different DI regions
Discussion and conclusions
Discussion
Findings
Further remarks
Full Text
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