IEM Daily Feature
Thursday, 13 February 2014
Thursday, 13 February 2014
Hours for Snow
Posted: 13 Feb 2014 05:47 AM
For rainfall, it is well established that Iowa
experiences two peaks in
hourly frequency. One is in the early morning hours associated with a
phenomena known as the low level jet and the other, in the very late
afternoon/evening hours associated with the heating of the day driving
storms. For snowfall, the forcing is a bit different and the featured
chart presents the hourly frequencies of having snowfall reported by the
Des Moines Airport sensor. The peak shown for all events is during the
coldest time of day (right before sunrise), which would be the best odds
that a precipitating storm could have temperatures cold enough to support
snow. That is not the entire story though as the smaller bars depict when
the most intense snowfalls are reported (coded +SN in the reports). These
intense events have a clear diurnal pattern with the maximum in the late
afternoon hours. It is not entirely clear why this is, but a logical
explanation is that convective snow (like what we experienced in mid
January) is enhanced and perhaps forced by daylight heating. While the
bars are normalized, you should notice the large difference in frequency
between the intense +SN events and all snow events.
Voting:
Good = 32
Bad = 12
Abstain = 4
Tags: asos snow metar
Voting:
Good = 32
Bad = 12
Abstain = 4
Tags: asos snow metar