Characteristics And Variability Of Storm Tracks In The North Pacific, Bering Sea And Alaska

Dissertation (Ph.D.) University of Alaska Fairbanks, 2009 Storm activity in the North Pacific, Bering Sea and Alaska regions is investigated using various automated storm tracking and parameter extraction algorithms. Specific, novel details of storm activity throughout the year are presented. The in...

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Main Author: Dos Santos Mesquita, Michel
Format: Doctoral or Postdoctoral Thesis
Language:unknown
Published: 2009
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/11122/9007
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spelling ftunivalaska:oai:scholarworks.alaska.edu:11122/9007 2023-05-15T15:43:41+02:00 Characteristics And Variability Of Storm Tracks In The North Pacific, Bering Sea And Alaska Dos Santos Mesquita, Michel 2009 http://hdl.handle.net/11122/9007 unknown http://hdl.handle.net/11122/9007 Department of Atmospheric Sciences Atmospheric sciences Meteorology Dissertation phd 2009 ftunivalaska 2023-02-23T21:37:11Z Dissertation (Ph.D.) University of Alaska Fairbanks, 2009 Storm activity in the North Pacific, Bering Sea and Alaska regions is investigated using various automated storm tracking and parameter extraction algorithms. Specific, novel details of storm activity throughout the year are presented. The influence of major climatic drivers is considered, including the Pacific/North American Index and sea ice variability. Details of synoptic-scale forcing on a specific, severe storm event are considered in the context of how different tracking algorithms are able to depict the event. New storm climatology results show that the inter-seasonal variability is not as large during spring and autumn as it is in winter. Most storm variables exhibited a maxima pattern that was oriented along a zonal axis. From season to season this axis underwent a north-south shift and, in some cases, a rotation to the northeast. Barotropic processes have an influence in shaping the downstream end of storm tracks and, together with the blocking influence of the coastal orography of northwest North America, result in high lysis concentrations, effectively making the Gulf of Alaska the "graveyard" of Pacific storms. Summer storms tended to be longest in duration. Temporal trends tended to be weak over the study area. Sea surface temperature did not emerge as a major cyclogenesis control in the Gulf of Alaska. Positive sea-ice anomalies in the Sea of Okhotsk were found to decrease secondary cyclogenesis, shift cyclolysis locations westward, and alter the North Pacific subtropical jet. In the Atlantic, a negative North-Atlantic-Oscillation-like pattern is observed; these results were confirmed by experiments on the ECHAM5 Atmospheric Global Circulation Model driven with sea-ice anomalies in the Sea of Okhotsk. The destructive west Alaska storm of autumn 1992, which flooded Nome, was investigated using two storm tracking algorithms: NOAA's (National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration) current operational algorithm and the Melbourne algorithm. ... Doctoral or Postdoctoral Thesis Bering Sea Nome North Atlantic North Atlantic oscillation Sea ice Alaska University of Alaska: ScholarWorks@UA Bering Sea Fairbanks Gulf of Alaska Okhotsk Pacific
institution Open Polar
collection University of Alaska: ScholarWorks@UA
op_collection_id ftunivalaska
language unknown
topic Atmospheric sciences
Meteorology
spellingShingle Atmospheric sciences
Meteorology
Dos Santos Mesquita, Michel
Characteristics And Variability Of Storm Tracks In The North Pacific, Bering Sea And Alaska
topic_facet Atmospheric sciences
Meteorology
description Dissertation (Ph.D.) University of Alaska Fairbanks, 2009 Storm activity in the North Pacific, Bering Sea and Alaska regions is investigated using various automated storm tracking and parameter extraction algorithms. Specific, novel details of storm activity throughout the year are presented. The influence of major climatic drivers is considered, including the Pacific/North American Index and sea ice variability. Details of synoptic-scale forcing on a specific, severe storm event are considered in the context of how different tracking algorithms are able to depict the event. New storm climatology results show that the inter-seasonal variability is not as large during spring and autumn as it is in winter. Most storm variables exhibited a maxima pattern that was oriented along a zonal axis. From season to season this axis underwent a north-south shift and, in some cases, a rotation to the northeast. Barotropic processes have an influence in shaping the downstream end of storm tracks and, together with the blocking influence of the coastal orography of northwest North America, result in high lysis concentrations, effectively making the Gulf of Alaska the "graveyard" of Pacific storms. Summer storms tended to be longest in duration. Temporal trends tended to be weak over the study area. Sea surface temperature did not emerge as a major cyclogenesis control in the Gulf of Alaska. Positive sea-ice anomalies in the Sea of Okhotsk were found to decrease secondary cyclogenesis, shift cyclolysis locations westward, and alter the North Pacific subtropical jet. In the Atlantic, a negative North-Atlantic-Oscillation-like pattern is observed; these results were confirmed by experiments on the ECHAM5 Atmospheric Global Circulation Model driven with sea-ice anomalies in the Sea of Okhotsk. The destructive west Alaska storm of autumn 1992, which flooded Nome, was investigated using two storm tracking algorithms: NOAA's (National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration) current operational algorithm and the Melbourne algorithm. ...
format Doctoral or Postdoctoral Thesis
author Dos Santos Mesquita, Michel
author_facet Dos Santos Mesquita, Michel
author_sort Dos Santos Mesquita, Michel
title Characteristics And Variability Of Storm Tracks In The North Pacific, Bering Sea And Alaska
title_short Characteristics And Variability Of Storm Tracks In The North Pacific, Bering Sea And Alaska
title_full Characteristics And Variability Of Storm Tracks In The North Pacific, Bering Sea And Alaska
title_fullStr Characteristics And Variability Of Storm Tracks In The North Pacific, Bering Sea And Alaska
title_full_unstemmed Characteristics And Variability Of Storm Tracks In The North Pacific, Bering Sea And Alaska
title_sort characteristics and variability of storm tracks in the north pacific, bering sea and alaska
publishDate 2009
url http://hdl.handle.net/11122/9007
geographic Bering Sea
Fairbanks
Gulf of Alaska
Okhotsk
Pacific
geographic_facet Bering Sea
Fairbanks
Gulf of Alaska
Okhotsk
Pacific
genre Bering Sea
Nome
North Atlantic
North Atlantic oscillation
Sea ice
Alaska
genre_facet Bering Sea
Nome
North Atlantic
North Atlantic oscillation
Sea ice
Alaska
op_relation http://hdl.handle.net/11122/9007
Department of Atmospheric Sciences
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