Climatology of potentially severe convective environments from reanalysis.
Sorry, the full text of this article is not available in Huskie Commons. Please click on the alternative location to access it. 119 p. This study establishes a U.S. climatology of potentially severe convective environments for the period 1979--2009 using reanalysis data. Examinations of variability...
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ftnorthillinuni:oai:commons.lib.niu.edu:10843/12403 2023-05-15T14:51:34+02:00 Climatology of potentially severe convective environments from reanalysis. Gensini, Vittorio Angelo. Walker S. Ashley. 2010. http://commons.lib.niu.edu/handle/10843/12403 http://hdl.handle.net/10843/12403 unknown Northern Illinois University.Geography. Masters Abstracts International, Volume: 49-01, page: 0314. 9781124192192 http://commons.lib.niu.edu/handle/10843/12403 http://hdl.handle.net/10843/12403 Meteorology Atmospheric Sciences Severe storms United States Arctic oscillation 2010 ftnorthillinuni 2020-09-22T08:45:15Z Sorry, the full text of this article is not available in Huskie Commons. Please click on the alternative location to access it. 119 p. This study establishes a U.S. climatology of potentially severe convective environments for the period 1979--2009 using reanalysis data. Examinations of variability of significant severe weather environments are presented for five active severe weather regions in the U.S. Regional comparisons illustrate significant environments have changed little over the period of record. Significant severe environments are then verified by significant severe weather reports to ensure climatologies presented herein are indeed representative of observations. Reports indicate that environments calculated by reanalysis tend to overestimate the actual distribution of reports, likely due to the absence of accounting for a lifting mechanism. On average, reanalysis calculated significant severe weather environments closely mimic the annual cycle of significant severe weather reports. Additionally, analysis the Arctic Oscillation's impact on significant severe weather reports in the Midwest also conducted. While the Arctic Oscillation alone shows little skill in predicting significant severe weather reports, further studies should incorporate additional teleconnection indices, as many factors must work in concert to produce a significant severe weather event. Other/Unknown Material Arctic Northern Illinois University (NIU): Huskie Commons Repository Arctic |
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Northern Illinois University (NIU): Huskie Commons Repository |
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Meteorology Atmospheric Sciences Severe storms United States Arctic oscillation |
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Meteorology Atmospheric Sciences Severe storms United States Arctic oscillation Gensini, Vittorio Angelo. Climatology of potentially severe convective environments from reanalysis. |
topic_facet |
Meteorology Atmospheric Sciences Severe storms United States Arctic oscillation |
description |
Sorry, the full text of this article is not available in Huskie Commons. Please click on the alternative location to access it. 119 p. This study establishes a U.S. climatology of potentially severe convective environments for the period 1979--2009 using reanalysis data. Examinations of variability of significant severe weather environments are presented for five active severe weather regions in the U.S. Regional comparisons illustrate significant environments have changed little over the period of record. Significant severe environments are then verified by significant severe weather reports to ensure climatologies presented herein are indeed representative of observations. Reports indicate that environments calculated by reanalysis tend to overestimate the actual distribution of reports, likely due to the absence of accounting for a lifting mechanism. On average, reanalysis calculated significant severe weather environments closely mimic the annual cycle of significant severe weather reports. Additionally, analysis the Arctic Oscillation's impact on significant severe weather reports in the Midwest also conducted. While the Arctic Oscillation alone shows little skill in predicting significant severe weather reports, further studies should incorporate additional teleconnection indices, as many factors must work in concert to produce a significant severe weather event. |
author2 |
Walker S. Ashley. |
author |
Gensini, Vittorio Angelo. |
author_facet |
Gensini, Vittorio Angelo. |
author_sort |
Gensini, Vittorio Angelo. |
title |
Climatology of potentially severe convective environments from reanalysis. |
title_short |
Climatology of potentially severe convective environments from reanalysis. |
title_full |
Climatology of potentially severe convective environments from reanalysis. |
title_fullStr |
Climatology of potentially severe convective environments from reanalysis. |
title_full_unstemmed |
Climatology of potentially severe convective environments from reanalysis. |
title_sort |
climatology of potentially severe convective environments from reanalysis. |
publisher |
Northern Illinois University.Geography. |
publishDate |
2010 |
url |
http://commons.lib.niu.edu/handle/10843/12403 http://hdl.handle.net/10843/12403 |
geographic |
Arctic |
geographic_facet |
Arctic |
genre |
Arctic |
genre_facet |
Arctic |
op_relation |
Masters Abstracts International, Volume: 49-01, page: 0314. 9781124192192 http://commons.lib.niu.edu/handle/10843/12403 http://hdl.handle.net/10843/12403 |
_version_ |
1766322704101670912 |