2:45 PM - 3:00 PM
[ACG30-10] Some further thoughts on atmospheric fronts and frontal air-sea interaction
Keywords:Frontal air-sea interaction, Atmospheric fronts, Extra-tropical transition
Additionally, some further results are presented characterizing the typical evolution of air-sea heat fluxes with the passage of mid-latitude atmospheric fronts. Dependent on location, cold (warm) frontal passages typically lead to increases (decreases) in air-sea heat fluxes of up to 50-200% within 0-12 hours. The associated cross-frontal flux gradients would be almost impossible to capture accurately without simultaneous atmospheric and oceanic measurements. The typical perturbation timescale associated with frontal passage also indicates that mid-latitude air-sea heat fluxes can generally always be considered as under atmospheric frontal influence.
The above results provide further evidence of the need to significantly expand our measurement capabilities for mid-latitude air-sea interaction.