The Jet Stream over Britain

Yes it's a good met site generally and good to see the JS moving northwards again. Guess we will now get drier colder weather for Christmas!

By the 16th December, it shows it racing striaght through the straights of Gibralter and through the Med. Does that mean that there will be dreadfull weather in the Western Med?
 
>racing striaght through the straights of Gibralter and through the Med. Does that mean that there will be dreadfull weather in the Western Med?

There is high pressure over the Med currently and due to hang around until at least the 16th. That should block the low coming in from the west. There again seven day forecasts are invariably wrong.
 
I see from the metcheck website that jetstreams are defined as the winds at 300 mb (winter).

Does this mean the height at which atmospheric pressure 1s 300 millibars. If so what is this approximately in thousands of feet?
 
>Does this mean the height at which atmospheric pressure 1s 300 millibars. If so what is this approximately in thousands of feet?

Yes. Thirty thousand feet.

1000 mb-- near surface
850 mb-- 1,500 meters (5,000 feet)
700 mb-- 3,100 meters (10,000 feet)
500 mb-- 5,500 meters (18,000 feet)
300 mb-- 9,300 meters (30,000 feet)
 
I see from the metcheck website that jetstreams are defined as the winds at 300 mb (winter).

Does this mean the height at which atmospheric pressure 1s 300 millibars. If so what is this approximately in thousands of feet?


if you take a typical 300hPa (or mbar) chart like this, the numbers you see are heights (in decametres) where pressure equals 300mb, every single line is drawn through points where computed pressure is 300hPa and height is equal to the number associated with the line (iso-heights)

in this chart the height where one finds 300mb roughly varies from 8400m (NE canada?) to 9600m to the south

The same principle is used in 500hPa, 700hPa charts etc.

The contrary happens with surface charts: height is kept constant (sea level) and lines are drawn connecting points with the same pressure (isobars)


300hpaglobal1.gif
 
Top