POLAR LOWS IN THE LABRADOR-SEA - A CASE-STUDY

Citation
Gwk. Moore et al., POLAR LOWS IN THE LABRADOR-SEA - A CASE-STUDY, Tellus. Series A, Dynamic meteorology and oceanography, 48(1), 1996, pp. 17-40
Citations number
38
Categorie Soggetti
Oceanografhy,"Metereology & Atmospheric Sciences
ISSN journal
02806495
Volume
48
Issue
1
Year of publication
1996
Pages
17 - 40
Database
ISI
SICI code
0280-6495(1996)48:1<17:PLITL->2.0.ZU;2-V
Abstract
In this paper, we will describe our analysis of a polar low event that occurred in the Labrador Sea during the winter of 1992. As there are unfortunately no in-situ observations of this event, we will rely on s atellite data as well as the high-resolution objective analaysis from the ECMWF to document the environment in which the low developed and t he structure of the low itself. We will show that the polar low develo ped during a cold air outbreak that was precipitated by the passage of an intense synoptic-scale low. The polar low appears to have develope d along a linear cloud feature as the result of an interaction between a low-level diabatically induced potential vorticity anomaly and an u pper-level potential vorticity anomaly that propagated into the area f rom the Canadian Arctic. We will also show that with the TOMS and TOVS retrievals for total column ozone, we are able to identify a signatur e of the upper-level potential vorticity anomaly. In its mature state, we will show that there were very strong winds, and as a result large fluxes of sensible and latent heat, associated with the polar low. In summary, the 1992 Labrador Sea polar low provides one with an excelle nt opportunity to study air-sea interactions and the coupling between the troposphere and stratosphere. The realization that the strong heat ing of the atmosphere and the concomitant cooling of the ocean associa ted with these storms may be sufficient to initiate downwelling events in the ocean may represent a hitherto undocumented link between the f ast and slow climate systems that deserves further attention.