Sea Breeze Started Early
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- KFDM Meteorologist
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Sea Breeze Started Early
One indication the water temps are above normal we had our first seabreeze showers and thunderstorms back in the first week of May. About a month ahead of schedule.
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- Portastorm
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Re: Sea Breeze Started Early
KFDM Meteorologist wrote:One indication the water temps are above normal we had our first seabreeze showers and thunderstorms back in the first week of May. About a month ahead of schedule.
Interesting point and something for us to watch more closely.
Hey, KFDM Met, good to have you on board!!
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- KFDM Meteorologist
- Professional-Met
- Posts: 1314
- Joined: Tue May 16, 2006 9:52 pm
- Location: Upper Texas Coast/Orange County
- KFDM Meteorologist
- Professional-Met
- Posts: 1314
- Joined: Tue May 16, 2006 9:52 pm
- Location: Upper Texas Coast/Orange County
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- Category 5
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- KFDM Meteorologist
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- Joined: Tue May 16, 2006 9:52 pm
- Location: Upper Texas Coast/Orange County
- jasons2k
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Hello Texan!! Welcome to the board!!
OK, I do have a question on this topic. Isn't the seabreeze more a function of hot land temperatures rather than warmer water temps?
Here is my understanding: the seabreeze is caused by the differential temperature between the land and the sea; the land heats up faster than the water, causing the pressue to fall slightly on land as the air heats and rises, the cooler sea breeze rushes inland to fill the pressure void. Then the opposite occurs at night with the land breeze.
Unless I have a fundamental misunderstanding of this process, I don't see how warmer SSTs would contribute to an early-season seabreeze. I think it had to do more with the fact we had early-season heat (over land) in the 90's, and light winds at the surface, allowing a seabreeze front to form. But as an amateur I could be wrong....??
OK, I do have a question on this topic. Isn't the seabreeze more a function of hot land temperatures rather than warmer water temps?
Here is my understanding: the seabreeze is caused by the differential temperature between the land and the sea; the land heats up faster than the water, causing the pressue to fall slightly on land as the air heats and rises, the cooler sea breeze rushes inland to fill the pressure void. Then the opposite occurs at night with the land breeze.
Unless I have a fundamental misunderstanding of this process, I don't see how warmer SSTs would contribute to an early-season seabreeze. I think it had to do more with the fact we had early-season heat (over land) in the 90's, and light winds at the surface, allowing a seabreeze front to form. But as an amateur I could be wrong....??
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- Portastorm
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I found a real nice article from NWS on this topic.
Check out the link:
http://www.srh.weather.gov/srh/jetstrea ... reezes.htm
Check out the link:
http://www.srh.weather.gov/srh/jetstrea ... reezes.htm
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