Modèle:

Times Series from the ECMWF

Mise à jour:
Update monthly
Greenwich Mean Time:
12:00 UTC = 14:00 CEST
Résolution:
1.0° x 1.0°
Paramètre:
Wet bulb potential temperature (θw) in C
Description:
The ThetaW map - updated every 6 hours - shows the modelled wet bulb potential temperature at the 850hPa level. The theta w (θw) areas are encircled by isotherms - lines connecting locations with equal wet bulb potential temperature. When an air parcel, starting from a certain pressure level, is lifted dry adiabatically until saturation and subsequently is brought to a level of 1000 hPa along a saturated adiabat it reaches what is called the saturated potential wet-bulb temperature: θw. As long as an air parcel undergoes an adiabatisch process, be it either dry or saturated, and in both descending and ascending motions θw does not change. Even when precipitation is evaporating adiabatically θw does not change, therefore θw is "conservative".
An air mass is defined as a quantity of air with a horizontal extent of several hundred or thousand kilometres and a thickness of several kilometres, which is homogeneous in thermal characteristics. Such an air mass may form when air has been over an extensive and homogeneous part of the Earth's surface during a considerable amount of time. This is the so-called source area. In due time, by means of radiative exchange processes and contact with the Earth's surface, an equilibrium develops which is evident from the fact that θw has approximately the same value in the entire air mass both horizontally and vertically, Hence θw can be used to characterise an air mass, with both sensible and latent heat are accounted for.
Depending on possible source areas several main air mass types can be distinguished: polar air (P), midlatitude air (ML) and (sub)tropical air (T). Also, but these are less important arctic air (A) and equatorial air (E). These five main types can be subdivided in continental air (c) and maritime air (m).

Table 1: Characteristic values for θw at 850 hPa (in °C) for various air masses.
Summer
Winter
cA < 7 mA < 9 cA < -5 mA < -7
cP 7 - 12 mP 6 - 12 CP -6 – 2 mP -3 - 5
CML 11 – 16 mML 11 - 16 CML 1 – 8 mML 3 - 9
cT 15 - 19 mT 14 - 19 CT 8 – 14 mT 8 - 16
cE > 17 mE > 18 cE > 14 mE > 16

If the θw distribution is considered on a pressure surface, preferably 850 hPa, then extensive areas with a small or no gradient can be observed. These areas of homogeneous θw values may be associated with air masses. Often various homogeneous areas are separated from one another by relatively narrow transformation zones displaying a strong gradient. Here frontal zones intersect with the pressure surface. Generally speaking a surface front is located where at 850 hPa the 'warm boundary' of the zone with the large θw gradient is present.(Source: Wageningen University)
Introduction to seasonal forecasting:
The production of seasonal forecasts, also known as seasonal climate forecasts, has undergone a huge transformation in the last few decades: from a purely academic and research exercise in the early '90s to the current situation where several meteorological forecast services, throughout the world, conduct routine operational seasonal forecasting activities. Such activities are devoted to providing estimates of statistics of weather on monthly and seasonal time scales, which places them somewhere between conventional weather forecasts and climate predictions.
 
In that sense, even though seasonal forecasts share some methods and tools with weather forecasting, they are part of a different paradigm which requires treating them in a different way. Instead of trying to answer to the question "how is the weather going to look like on a particular location in an specific day?", seasonal forecasts will tell us how likely it is that the coming season will be wetter, drier, warmer or colder than 'usual' for that time of year. This kind of long term predictions are feasible due to the behaviour of some of the Earth system components which evolve more slowly than the atmosphere (e.g. the ocean, the cryosphere) and in a predictable fashion, so their influence on the atmosphere can add a noticeable signal.
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