Long-term Changes in Synoptic-Scale Air Mass Persistence Across the United States

From a climate dynamics perspective, air mass persistence reflects variability in the dynamic nature of the atmosphere. In this study, a historical analysis of synoptic air mass persistence across the continental United States is presented to portray spatial and temporal variability and trends in ai...

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Main Author: Suggs, Jessica Marie
Other Authors: Geography
Format: Others
Published: Virginia Tech 2017
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Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10919/78705
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spelling ndltd-VTETD-oai-vtechworks.lib.vt.edu-10919-787052021-02-27T05:32:23Z Long-term Changes in Synoptic-Scale Air Mass Persistence Across the United States Suggs, Jessica Marie Geography Ellis, Andrew Carroll, David F. Zick, Stephanie E. Geography Environmental Sciences From a climate dynamics perspective, air mass persistence reflects variability in the dynamic nature of the atmosphere. In this study, a historical analysis of synoptic air mass persistence across the continental United States is presented to portray spatial and temporal variability and trends in air mass residence times. Historical daily air mass calendars for 140 locations across the United States for the 60-year period 1955 through 2015 were extracted from the Spatial Synoptic Classification database. The data were stratified by season, and a historical climatology of seasonal air mass occurrence was created for each location. The historical daily air mass data were then translated into a record of residence time, or the length of consecutive days that a synoptic air mass type was in place at a location. Each historical record of seasonal air mass residence times, or persistence, was then analyzed for spatial variability across the United States and for temporal variability and trends. Results reveal a statistically significant increase in air mass persistence for many areas of the country during three seasons, but most commonly across the southern United States during the summer season (June-August). However, this pattern was reversed for the winter season (December-February), the analyses revealed a general pattern of decreasing cool-season air mass persistence across the continental United States. The seasonally-dependent change in air mass persistence across the United States may be indicative of changed or changing mid-latitude atmospheric dynamics in the form of a previously suggested northward migration of the polar jet stream. Master of Science 2017-08-16T08:00:36Z 2017-08-16T08:00:36Z 2017-08-15 Thesis vt_gsexam:12528 http://hdl.handle.net/10919/78705 In Copyright http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/ ETD application/pdf Virginia Tech
collection NDLTD
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Geography
Environmental Sciences
spellingShingle Geography
Environmental Sciences
Suggs, Jessica Marie
Long-term Changes in Synoptic-Scale Air Mass Persistence Across the United States
description From a climate dynamics perspective, air mass persistence reflects variability in the dynamic nature of the atmosphere. In this study, a historical analysis of synoptic air mass persistence across the continental United States is presented to portray spatial and temporal variability and trends in air mass residence times. Historical daily air mass calendars for 140 locations across the United States for the 60-year period 1955 through 2015 were extracted from the Spatial Synoptic Classification database. The data were stratified by season, and a historical climatology of seasonal air mass occurrence was created for each location. The historical daily air mass data were then translated into a record of residence time, or the length of consecutive days that a synoptic air mass type was in place at a location. Each historical record of seasonal air mass residence times, or persistence, was then analyzed for spatial variability across the United States and for temporal variability and trends. Results reveal a statistically significant increase in air mass persistence for many areas of the country during three seasons, but most commonly across the southern United States during the summer season (June-August). However, this pattern was reversed for the winter season (December-February), the analyses revealed a general pattern of decreasing cool-season air mass persistence across the continental United States. The seasonally-dependent change in air mass persistence across the United States may be indicative of changed or changing mid-latitude atmospheric dynamics in the form of a previously suggested northward migration of the polar jet stream. === Master of Science
author2 Geography
author_facet Geography
Suggs, Jessica Marie
author Suggs, Jessica Marie
author_sort Suggs, Jessica Marie
title Long-term Changes in Synoptic-Scale Air Mass Persistence Across the United States
title_short Long-term Changes in Synoptic-Scale Air Mass Persistence Across the United States
title_full Long-term Changes in Synoptic-Scale Air Mass Persistence Across the United States
title_fullStr Long-term Changes in Synoptic-Scale Air Mass Persistence Across the United States
title_full_unstemmed Long-term Changes in Synoptic-Scale Air Mass Persistence Across the United States
title_sort long-term changes in synoptic-scale air mass persistence across the united states
publisher Virginia Tech
publishDate 2017
url http://hdl.handle.net/10919/78705
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