Abstract

Major river flooding affected the United Kingdom in late September 2012 as a slow-moving extratropical cyclone brought over 150 mm of rain to parts of northern England and north Wales. The cyclone deepened over the United Kingdom on 24–26 September as a potential vorticity (PV) anomaly approached from the northwest, elongated into a PV streamer, and wrapped around the cyclone. The strength and position of the PV anomaly is modified in the initial conditions of Weather Research and Forecasting Model simulations, using PV surgery, to examine whether different upper-level forcing, or different phasing between the PV anomaly and cyclone, could have produced an even more extreme event. These simulations reveal that quasigeostrophic (QG) forcing for ascent ahead of the anomaly contributed to the persistence of the rainfall over the United Kingdom. Moreover, weakening the anomaly resulted in lower rainfall accumulations across the United Kingdom, suggesting that the impact of the event might be proportional to the strength of the upper-level QG forcing. However, when the anomaly was strengthened, it rotated cyclonically around a large-scale trough over Iceland rather than moving eastward as in the verifying analysis, with strongly reduced accumulated rainfall across the United Kingdom. A similar evolution developed when the anomaly was moved farther away from the cyclone. Conversely, moving the anomaly nearer to the cyclone produced a similar solution to the verifying analysis, with slightly increased rainfall totals. These counterintuitive results suggest that the verifying analysis represented almost the highest-impact scenario possible for this flooding event when accounting for sensitivity to the initial position and strength of the PV anomaly.

Highlights

  • Extratropical cyclones are a major contributor to high-impact weather across the United Kingdom, with about 70% of extreme precipitation events in the United Kingdom occurring in the presence of cyclones (Pfahl and Wernli 2012) and their attendant fronts (Catto and Pfahl 2013)

  • This study used Weather Research and Forecasting (WRF) simulations, with initial conditions modified using potential vorticity (PV) surgery, and QG omega equation diagnostics to demonstrate the relationship between the accumulated rainfall in the 23–26 September 2012 U.K. floods and the strength of the upper-level forcing associated with an approaching PV anomaly

  • In the control simulation and in observations, the cyclone deepened on 24–25 September as the upper-level PV anomaly approached from the west, elongated into a PV streamer, and wrapped around the cyclone

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Summary

Introduction

Extratropical cyclones are a major contributor to high-impact weather across the United Kingdom, with about 70% of extreme precipitation events in the United Kingdom occurring in the presence of cyclones (Pfahl and Wernli 2012) and their attendant fronts (Catto and Pfahl 2013) These heavy precipitation events can cause huge socioeconomic impacts. Most major winter floods in the United Kingdom are connected to persistent orographically enhanced precipitation caused by atmospheric rivers (e.g., Lavers et al 2011, 2012; Champion et al 2015), frontal systems associated with slow-moving summer and autumn cyclones cause U.K. precipitation extremes, with heavy rainfall often caused by slow-moving frontal rainbands to the northwest of the cyclone center (Hand et al 2004).

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