franksingleton
Well-Known Member
I appreciate the effort Frank, and if I understand you correctly, you're saying that upper level 'pertubations' can lead to (or at least aid in) the development of a low at the surface. I fully accept that, but that doesn't change the fact that the Jetstream is where it is, because it is above the boundary between two adjacent airmasses. If I've got it wrong, perhaps you could explain how the Jetstream moves the UK's typical Polar Maritime airmass down to Portugal?
This may or may not help.
Take a look at http://www.netweather.tv/index.cgi?action=jetstream;sess=. This is output direct from the GFS for the next two weeks. OK, I have grave doubts about its validity after 7 days but it will illustrate my point – I hope...
In the current situation, the jet stream is predominately strongly west to east. Surface weather systems will run quickly west to east. For much of the time the core of the jet is over the UK. Then, about 27 December the jet has worked itself south of Britain. A ridge of high pressure is starting to develop over the off the eastern sea board in association with a ridge in the jet stream.
By midday on the 28t the surface high pressure covers much of mid Atlantic. The high has strong southerly winds on its western side pushing warm air northwards. Northerly winds on the eastern side of the high push cold air southwards. The net result is an increase in the amplitude of the oscillation of the jet stream. That heads down towards the Iberian Peninsula giving a cold spell over Portugal.
On this forecast by the jet plunges as far south as North Africa. If the forecast is right the end of the year will be nasty and cold over the western med. By that time, over the Atlantic the jet is again main west to east with no great oscillation. Lows will again be running quickly west to east.
Which is cause and which is effect in the above is impossible to say. The development of the surface high occurs as the jets stream develops a marked oscillation.
Just looking at the jet stream forecast I can see roughly what the surface patterns will be. BUT I would not produce a good forecast chart. The computer model can do the sums that no human can do and produce mutually compatible upper air and surface level charts.
Whether this forecast is going to be good I cannot say. However, the point that I am trying to make is the interaction between all levels and all parts of the atmosphere. A phrase that I trot out from time to time is that “to know about the weather somewhere, you have to know about the weather everywhere.” That applies in 3D.
PS If anyone wonders where they can see forecast surface isobars out the 14 days, there are two sources that I know. One is the SailGrib app’ the other is Saildocs got by using email. There is another source but I cannot now remember where.