Temperate Cyclones - Clarity Desk Hub
Temperate Cyclones - Clarity Desk Hub
Temperate Cyclones
Imagine you are standing in the European countryside on a crisp autumn morning. The air is calm, but dark clouds are gathering
on the horizon. The temperature begins to drop, and soon, a strong wind picks up, carrying drizzles of rain. Within hours, a full-
blown storm system engulfs the region, bringing heavy rain, gusty winds, and eventually, clearing up with a sharp drop in
temperature.
What you just witnessed is the impact of a temperate cyclone, an atmospheric system that plays a crucial role in shaping the
weather in mid-latitude regions. Let’s try to understand how these cyclones form, evolve, and dissipate.
Table of Contents
Key Characteristics:
✔ Core of low pressure, with pressure increasing outward.
✔ Variable shapes—circular, elliptical, or wedge-like (V-shaped).
✔ Formed by the collision of contrasting air masses—cold polar air and warm westerly winds.
✔ Move from west to east, influenced by the westerlies and the polar front jet stream.
Short Summary:
Temperate cyclones form when warm and cold air masses collide, creating a stationary front where both move parallel to each
other. If a cold air mass invades the warm air mass from behind or vice versa, it intensifies the system. This interaction leads to a
circulatory motion due to the Coriolis force, causing an anticlockwise rotation in the Northern Hemisphere and a clockwise rotation
in the Southern Hemisphere. The strong ascent of warm air occurs at the warm front, while the opposite happens at the cold front.
Since warm air is less dense, it rises and is eventually lifted by the cold air mass, leading to the formation of an occluded front. At
this stage, the cyclone dissipates through a process called frontolysis.
Cyclone Tracks:
Normally move from west to east, following the westerlies and polar front jet stream.
However, due to Rossby waves (upper atmospheric meanders), their path can become irregular, sometimes pushing into
subtropical regions.
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