http://earthobservatory.nasa.gov/Natura ... g_id=12172
Sandy Delgado
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zoeyann wrote:So is this one of those amazing day after tommorrow hurricane blizzards. Just kidding could not help it. It is a really amazing picture though.





HurricaneBill wrote:I think I read somewhere on the internet that Europe actually names these storms. I think they call them "oktenfiels" (I know I definitely misspelled that). I think that is German for "hurricane low". I think there was a powerful one in 1990 named Daria and a recent one named Gerda.



senorpepr wrote:HurricaneBill wrote:I think I read somewhere on the internet that Europe actually names these storms. I think they call them "oktenfiels" (I know I definitely misspelled that). I think that is German for "hurricane low". I think there was a powerful one in 1990 named Daria and a recent one named Gerda.
Actually... you remembered correctly. The University of Berlin assigns names to the significant lows and highs throughout Europe. They have an interesting naming convention. I believe somewhere on their site they talk about it. In early 2003, they allowed the public to bid on naming rights on eBay. Someone could bid for a slot starting with a certain letter. The highest bidder was allowed to name that storm using that specific letter. The money was directed to the meteorology department. Here's the link along with their 36-hr forecast.
senorpepr wrote:Quite honestly this is nothing out of the ordinary. During my days of forecasting in Europe, this Icelandic lows were very common. In this situation, this low is fairly weak in comparision to the average low -- of course being summer. Sorry, no blizzards with this system. Just some rainshowers associated with the trough along with some rain associated with the frontolysizing (dieing) occluded boundary.
Here's a satellite analysis of Europe, with the featured low SSE of Iceland. Of course, this image is an IR shot with cloud temperates of greater than -8°C removed. You can see this low isn't all that impressive at all. Wait until around mid-winter. Then you'll see some fairly impressive lows.
http://131.54.120.150/GifImages/metsatanal.gif



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