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مباحث عمومی هواشناسی

وضعیت
موضوع بسته شده است.

mehrdad_teh

متخصص بخش هواشناسی
طي هفته پيشرو تا پايان وضعيت مشابه روزهاي اخير بدون بارش در اكثر مناطق سپري خواهد شد تنها بارش هايي در روز دوشنبه در سواحل خزر و بعضا برخي مناطق شمال شرق داريم.

تا اينكه در روز جمعه ناوه اي بسيار عميق و هسته سرد برروي يونان مستقر خواهد شد اين سيستم با هواي بسيار سردي همراهي ميشه با استقرار اين ناوه بر روي مديترانه پر فشار جنب حاره اي در غرب خاورميانه اندكي عقب نشيني خواهد كرد.

تا اينجاي قضيه رو داشته باشيد

روزهاي آينده بيشتر در موردش صحبت خواهيم كرد.


شب بر دوستان خوش :گل:
 

ali.doosti

کاربر ويژه
اینم آبادان!(کوه که نداره از اینا عکس گرفتن دیگه!)

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دانشگاهم :

1-_abadan-_8.JPG
 

vahid

کاربر ويژه
دوستان دما طی 2 هفته ی آینده چه جوریه ؟ میخواستم بدونم سیستمهارو هوای سرد همراهی میکنه یا گرم و مرطوب؟
 

arashz

مدیر بخش هواشناسی
دوستان دما طی 2 هفته ی آینده چه جوریه ؟ میخواستم بدونم سیستمهارو هوای سرد همراهی میکنه یا گرم و مرطوب؟

درود بر شما

در کل با افزایش دما روبرو هستیم، از اواسط هفته آینده با یک سیستم بارشی در سمت غرب و جنوب غرب کشور مواجه خواهیم بود.
 

arashz

مدیر بخش هواشناسی
شب همه دوستان خوش و خرم، به امید وبارش در تمام خاک پاک ایران زمین.
 

rahsazan

کاربر ويژه
دوستان شب بخیر و خدا نگهدار:بای:

Weather for Iran


Cities
PlaceAlertsTemp.HumidityPressureConditionsWindUpdated
Abadan11 °C71%1021 hPaScattered CloudsNE at 7 km/h / 2.1 m/s11:30 PM IRSTSave
Abadeh6 °C34%1022 hPaClearNorth at 11 km/h / 3.1 m/s11:15 PM IRSTSave
Abu Musa19 °C60%1022 hPaClearSSE at 6 km/h / 1.5 m/s12:00 AM GSTSave
Ahar-3 °C64%1022 hPaClearNE at 11 km/h / 3.1 m/s11:30 PM IRSTSave
Ahwaz11 °C71%1021 hPaMostly CloudySE at 7 km/h / 2.1 m/s12:00 AM IRSTSave
Ali-Goodarz-2 °C42%1027 hPaClearESE at 7 km/h /9:30 PM IRSTSave
Anzali5 °C93%1019 hPaClearCalm11:30 PM IRSTSave
Arak-1 °C31%1026 hPaClearCalm9:30 PM IRSTSave
Ardebil2 °C47%1020 hPaScattered CloudsSouth at 14 km/h /9:30 PM IRSTSave
Babulsar3 °C75%1020 hPaClearSSW at 11 km/h / 3.1 m/s11:30 PM IRSTSave
Baft4 °C21%1021 hPaClearNNW at 11 km/h /9:30 PM IRSTSave
Bam8 °C15%1021 hPaClearWest at 11 km/h /9:30 PM IRSTSave
Bandar Lengeh16 °C59%1020 hPaClearWest at 7 km/h / 2.1 m/s11:30 PM IRSTSave
Bandarabbass13 °C54%1021 hPaClearNNW at 11 km/h / 3.1 m/s12:00 AM IRSTSave
Birjand-3 °C43%1022 hPaClearESE at 7 km/h / 2.1 m/s11:30 PM IRSTSave
Bojnourd-1 °C68%1023 hPaClearCalm9:30 PM IRSTSave
Bushehr13 °C54%1020 hPaClearEast at 7 km/h / 2.1 m/s11:30 PM IRSTSave
Bushehr13 °C54%1020 hPaClearEast at 7 km/h / 2.1 m/s11:30 PM IRSTSave
Chahbahar12 °C54%1020 hPaClearNNW at 7 km/h / 2.1 m/s11:20 PM IRSTSave
Esfahan-5 °C74%1023 hPaHazeWest at 11 km/h / 3.1 m/s12:00 AM IRSTSave
Fasa6 °C61%1021 hPaOvercastCalm11:20 PM IRSTSave
Ferdous4 °C18%1023 hPaClearEast at 11 km/h /9:30 PM IRSTSave
Gach Saran Du Gunbadan8 °C53%1018 hPaPartly CloudyCalm11:30 PM IRSTSave
Gharakhil3 °C75%1020 hPaClearSSW at 11 km/h / 3.1 m/s11:30 PM IRSTSave
Ghasre-Shirin7 °C31%n/aCloudyESE at 8 km/h / NA m/sEstimatedSave
Ghazvin1 °C81%1020 hPaClearCalm11:30 PM IRSTSave
Ghuchan-5 °C74%1021 hPaPartly CloudySE at 7 km/h /9:30 PM IRSTSave
Gorgan3 °C87%1021 hPaClearCalm11:30 PM IRSTSave
Hamedan-5 °C74%1023 hPaClearSSW at 11 km/h / 3.1 m/s11:30 PM IRSTSave
Ilam2 °C38%1025 hPaClearESE at 11 km/h /9:30 PM IRSTSave
Iranshahr7 °C20%1023 hPaClearNE at 7 km/h / 2.1 m/s11:30 PM IRSTSave
Jask18 °C45%1020 hPaClearNNW at 26 km/h / 7.2 m/s9:30 PM IRSTSave
Kashan1 °C65%1020 hPaClearENE at 11 km/h / 3.1 m/s11:30 PM IRSTSave
Kashmar0 °C34%1024 hPaClearCalm9:30 PM IRSTSave
Kerman2 °C52%1023 hPaClearESE at 11 km/h / 3.1 m/s11:30 PM IRSTSave
Kermanshah-5 °C63%1024 hPaClearSSE at 7 km/h / 2.1 m/s11:30 PM IRSTSave
Kharg13 °C54%1020 hPaClearEast at 7 km/h / 2.1 m/s11:30 PM IRSTSave
Khor5 °C22%1022 hPaClearCalm9:30 PM IRSTSave
Khorram Abad-2 °C69%1024 hPaClearEast at 7 km/h / 2.1 m/s11:20 PM IRSTSave
Khoy-8 °C65%1031 hPaMostly CloudyCalm9:30 PM IRSTSave
Kish Island16 °C59%1020 hPaClearWest at 7 km/h / 2.1 m/s11:30 PM IRSTSave
Konarak12 °C54%1020 hPaClearNNW at 7 km/h / 2.1 m/s11:20 PM IRSTSave
Makko-5 °C72%1028 hPaScattered CloudsCalm9:30 PM IRSTSave
Maragheh-3 °C64%1022 hPaClearNE at 11 km/h / 3.1 m/s11:30 PM IRSTSave
Mashhad0 °C75%1019 hPaClearSouth at 7 km/h / 2.1 m/s12:00 AM IRSTSave
Masjed-Soleyman10 °C71%1020 hPaScattered CloudsCalm11:30 PM IRSTSave
Mohabad0 °C34%1024 hPaMostly CloudyCalm9:30 PM IRSTSave
Nehbandan2 °C35%1026 hPaCloudyCalm9:30 PM IRSTSave
Noshahr7 °C61%1019 hPaClearSouth at 7 km/h / 2.1 m/s11:30 PM IRSTSave
Omidieh11 °C62%1022 hPaScattered CloudsCalm11:30 PM IRSTSave
Orumieh-4 °C74%1021 hPaClearWSW at 7 km/h / 2.1 m/s11:20 PM IRSTSave
Pars Abad Moghan3 °C71%1019 hPaClearSSW at 11 km/h /9:30 PM IRSTSave
Ramsar6 °C70%1018 hPaClearCalm11:30 PM IRSTSave
Rasht5 °C93%1019 hPaClearCalm11:30 PM IRSTSave
Sabzevar-1 °C49%1024 hPaClearCalm9:30 PM IRSTSave
Safi-Abad Dezful10 °C71%1020 hPaScattered CloudsCalm11:30 PM IRSTSave
Saghez-11 °C59%1033 hPaPartly CloudyCalm9:30 PM IRSTSave
Sanandaj-4 °C74%1023 hPaClearCalm11:30 PM IRSTSave
Sarab-5 °C49%1030 hPaClearWNW at 7 km/h /9:30 PM IRSTSave
Sarakhs7 °C34%1020 hPaClearSE at 7 km/h /9:30 PM IRSTSave
Saravan5 °C7%1026 hPaClearENE at 11 km/h /9:30 PM IRSTSave
Semnan1 °C52%1020 hPaClearNW at 4 km/h / 1.0 m/s11:30 PM IRSTSave
Shahre-Kord-2 °C55%1023 hPaScattered CloudsCalm11:30 PM IRSTSave
Shahrud-2 °C36%1025 hPaClearNorth at 7 km/h /9:30 PM IRSTSave
Shiraz4 °C65%1023 hPaClearCalm12:00 AM IRSTSave
Siri Island16 °C59%1020 hPaClearWest at 7 km/h / 2.1 m/s11:30 PM IRSTSave
Sirjan3 °C27%1023 hPaScattered CloudsENE at 11 km/h /9:30 PM IRSTSave
Tabas6 °C19%1024 hPaClearEast at 7 km/h /9:30 PM IRSTSave
Tabriz-3 °C64%1022 hPaClearNE at 11 km/h / 3.1 m/s11:30 PM IRSTSave
Tehran3 °C38%1019 hPaClearWest at 7 km/h / 2.1 m/s12:00 AM IRSTSave
Torbat-Heydarieh-3 °C59%1024 hPaClearNNW at 7 km/h /9:30 PM IRSTSave
Yasoge4 °C42%1025 hPaScattered CloudsCalm9:30 PM IRSTSave
Yazd6 °C36%1022 hPaClearSW at 7 km/h / 2.1 m/s11:30 PM IRSTSave
Zabol1 °C32%1023 hPaClearNorth at 7 km/h / 2.1 m/s11:30 PM IRSTSave
Zahedan2 °C30%1021 hPaClearSouth at 11 km/h / 3.1 m/s11:30 PM IRSTSave
Zanjan-2 °C57%1025 hPaMostly CloudyCalm9:30 PM IRSTSave

 

ماهان.

کاربر ويژه
بر منکرش ;)
پس هم رشته ایم بابا...دست ماروهم بگیر بیایم داداش :D
بچه درس خونیما:خنده2:

بابا ای‌ول. ما که درس‌خون‌اش نبودیم. سرمون هر جایی بود غیر از کتاب و دفتر. یه نمونه‌ش الان دیگه... دو هفته‌ دیگه به شروع امتحانا بیشتر نمونده@ صب تا شب پلاسم توی نت.

فوق لیسانس می‌خوندی، نه؟ و چه گرایشی؟
 

Amir Mohsen

متخصص بخش هواشناسی
سلام علیکم و رحمه الله

این پیش بینی که در ذیل این پست ملاحظه می فرمایید مربوط به شهر مشهد هست و بنده در تعجبم که اگه در مشهد تو یک روز قرار باشه اینقدر بباره من یکی که باید برم به فکر قایق موتوری باشم!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!:خنده2:

TUE 29
rain.png
Rain6.4°C10.1°C15.5mmSW 17 max 20
WED 30
rain.png
Rain1.9°C3.7°C53.0mmNE 17 max 20
THU 31
chancesnow.png
Scattered clouds with Occasional Snow Showers0.0°C5.0°C0.4cmESE 9 max 11
 

ali.doosti

کاربر ويژه
بابا ای‌ول. ما که درس‌خون‌اش نبودیم. سرمون هر جایی بود غیر از کتاب و دفتر. یه نمونه‌ش الان دیگه... دو هفته‌ دیگه به شروع امتحانا بیشتر نمونده@ صب تا شب پلاسم توی نت.

فوق لیسانس می‌خوندی، نه؟ و چه گرایشی؟
بله فوق دانشگاه نفتم. گرایش HSE که مخفف health safety and environmente
یه بحث تو ایمنی صنایع نفته.شما بورسیه شدید fund میگیرید یا با مایه داری رفتی;)
 

Amir Mohsen

متخصص بخش هواشناسی
Stratospheric Phenomenon Is Bringing Frigid Cold to U.S
  • Published: January 18th, 2013
192 61 113 5



By Andrew Freedman
Follow @afreedma
An unusual event playing out high in the atmosphere above the Arctic Circle is setting the stage for what could be weeks upon weeks of frigid cold across wide swaths of the U.S., having already helped to bring cold and snowy weather to parts of Europe.
Forecast high temperatures on Monday, Jan. 21, from the GFS computer model.
Click to enlarge the image. Credit: Weatherbell
This phenomenon, known as a “sudden stratospheric warming event,” started on Jan. 6, but is something that is just beginning to have an effect on weather patterns across North America and Europe.
While the physics behind sudden stratospheric warming events are complicated, their implications are not: such events are often harbingers of colder weather in North America and Eurasia. The ongoing event favors colder and possibly stormier weather for as long as four to eight weeks after the event, meaning that after a mild start to the winter, the rest of this month and February could bring the coldest weather of the winter season to parts of the U.S., along with a heightened chance of snow.
Sudden stratospheric warming events take place in about half of all Northern Hemisphere winters, and they have been occurring with increasing frequency during the past decade, possibly related to the loss of Arctic sea ice due to global warming. Arctic sea ice declined to its smallest extent on record in September 2012.
An Arctic cold front was sliding south from Canada on Friday, getting ready to clear customs at the border on Saturday and Sunday, bringing an icy chill to areas from the Plains states through the Mid-Atlantic by early next week, including what promises to be a chilly second inauguration for President Obama. Temperatures in Washington on Monday are expected to hover in the low 30s, only a touch milder than Obama’s first inauguration, when the temperature was 28°F.
Reinforcing shots of cold air are likely to affect the Upper Midwest, Great Plains and into the East throughout February, with some milder periods sandwiched in between.
Sudden stratospheric warming events occur when large atmospheric waves, known as Rossby waves, extend beyond the troposphere where most weather occurs, and into the stratosphere. This vertical transport of energy can set a complex process into motion that leads to the breakdown of the high altitude cold low pressure area that typically spins above the North Pole during the winter, which is known as the polar vortex.
The polar vortex plays a major role in determining how much Arctic air spills southward toward the mid-latitudes. When there is a strong polar vortex, cold air tends to stay bottled up in the Arctic. However, when the vortex weakens or is disrupted, like a spinning top that suddenly starts wobbling, it can cause polar air masses to surge south, while the Arctic experiences milder-than-average temperatures.
During the ongoing stratospheric warming event, the polar vortex split in two, allowing polar air to spill out from the Arctic, as if a refrigerator door were suddenly opened.
polar_vortex_animation_Jan13.gif
An animation showing the evolution of the stratospheric warming event. The contours show absolute heights and the shading are height anomalies in the middle stratosphere, or about 16 miles above the surface. The height anomalies are a good proxy for temperature anomalies in the stratosphere with red representing high heights or warm temperatures and blue low heights or cold temperatures. You can see at the beginning of the loop a cohesive polar vortex along the coast of Northern Eurasia and then this area of higher heights or warm temperaturs rush poleward from Siberia into the polar vortex splitting it into two pieces, one over Eurasia and one over North America. The dramatic rise in heights or temperatures over the Pole is the sudden stratospheric warming. The result is that pieces of the polar vortex move equatorward and with it the associated cold temperatures. Usually something similar occurs in the troposphere in the ensuing weeks. Credit: AER/Justin Jones.
When the sudden stratospheric warming event began in early January, that signaled to weather forecasters that a cool down was more likely to occur by the end of the month, since it usually takes many days for developments in the stratosphere to affect weather in the troposphere, and vice versa.
“For reasons I don’t think we fully understand, the changes in the circulation that happen in the stratosphere [can] descend down all the way to the Earth’s surface,” said Judah Cohen, director of seasonal forecasting at Atmospheric and Environmental Research (AER) in Massachusetts.
As the polar stratosphere warms, high pressure builds over the Arctic, causing the polar jet stream to weaken. At the same time, the midlatitude jet stream strengthens, while also becoming wavier, with deeper troughs and ridges corresponding to more intense storms and high pressure areas. In fact, sudden stratospheric warming events even make so-called “blocked” weather patterns more likely to occur, which tilts the odds in favor of the development of winter storms in the U.S. and Europe.
Cohen was the lead author of a 2009 study that found that sudden stratospheric warming events are becoming more frequent, a trend that may be related to an increase in fall snow cover across Eurasia. The increase in snow cover has in turn been tied to the rapid loss of Arctic sea ice, since the increase in open water in the fall means that there is more atmospheric moisture available to fall as rain or snow.
Cohen and his colleagues at AER have been using an index of Eurasian snow cover during the month of October in order to make seasonal weather forecasts for the following winter, and he said that by using this technique, they successfully predicted the ongoing stratospheric warming event 30-days in advance.
“As far as I know this is a first and has huge implications for intraseasonal predictions,” he said.
Computer model forecast for February, showing widespread cooler than average conditions in much of the U.S.
Click to enlarge the image. Credit: Weatherbell.
Cohen’s research has also pointed to stratospheric warming events as one of the reasons why the second half of recent winters in the Northern Hemisphere have turned out to be colder than the first half.
“Scientists about a decade ago predicted that stratospheric warmings would become less frequent with climate change, however, just the opposite has happened and they have become more frequent. There is a positive trend in stratospheric warmings since the turn of the century and I have argued this is contributing to more severe winters,” he said.
When the vortex becomes dislodged from the pole, Cohen said, it can lead to a flow of air that is more north to south than west to east. “So when the warm air rushes the pole it displaces the cold air over the pole and forces it equatorward,” Cohen said.
This has major implications for U.S. winter weather.
High temperatures in North Dakota and Minnesota may not make it above zero Fahrenheit on Sunday and Monday. If Minneapolis records a high temperature below zero it will end its record-breaking streak of four years without such an occurrence. By Tuesday, the cold air will have spilled into Kentucky and Maryland as well as New England. And the long-range outlooks suggest that February is going to be a colder-than-average month from the Upper Midwest to the East Coast, although there may be brief breaks from the cold depending on the prevailing storm track.
Anthony Artusa, a seasonal climate forecaster at the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), said the cold air spilling southward for the inauguration may mark the beginning of a long-lasting cold period that is related to the stratospheric warming event. “It does look like this could be the early effects of it,” he said during a conference call with reporters on Thursday.
 

Amir Mohsen

متخصص بخش هواشناسی
Warming Arctic May Be Causing Cooler Winters in Eastern U.S., Europe
  • Published: January 13th, 2012
16 0 0 0



By Andrew Freedman
Follow @afreedma
The past few winters have featured unusually cold and snowy conditions in the Eastern U.S. and parts of Europe, causing many to question whether global warming exists at all. In the wake of several Mid-Atlantic and Northeast blizzards, which were given social media-driven monikers such as "Snowpocalypse" and "Snowmageddon," journalists and scientists went to great lengths to explain that heavy snowstorms are actually consistent with global warming. In fact, warming sea and air temperatures are putting more water vapor into the air, which supplies more energy for storms to work with and drives precipitation extremes.
Arctic sea ice extent at the end of the 2011 melt season was far below average. Credit: NASA.
That explains the snow, but not the cold. Last winter, however, I wrote several stories about a tantalizing explanation for the snow and cold, which I called the "Arctic Paradox." In short, it holds that as the Arctic warms up — it's generally warming twice as fast as the rest of the globe — the loss of sea ice and changes in how heat moves between the ocean and the atmosphere is rearranging weather patterns. The result, paradoxically, favors colder and snowier conditions outside the Arctic. In other words, the Arctic gets warmer, while winters in Boston, London, and Paris turn colder and snowier.
Now, two new studies have recently been published that advance this concept. The lead author of both studies, Judah Cohen of Atmospheric and Environmental Research, a private forecasting firm based in Lexington, Mass., has spent years trying to find patterns that would improve seasonal climate forecasts.
For winter forecasts, he thinks he has found the answer in Siberia, of all places.
Cohen and his colleagues have published a new paper in the journal Environmental Research Letters that ties Arctic warming to cooler winters in the eastern U.S. and northern Europe and Asia, via changes in Siberian snowfall.
According to the study, as the Arctic warms and loses more sea ice during the summer, more moisture can evaporate from the Arctic Ocean. That extra moisture becomes available for rain and snowstorms during the fall in northern Eurasia and other high-latitude regions. When it falls as snow, the added snow cover can set off a series of events in the lower and upper atmosphere that eventually leads to cooler and snowier conditions in the eastern U.S. and parts of Europe.
Temperature departures from average during December 2009, when the Arctic Oscillation was in a negative phase. Credit: NASA.
Late last year, Cohen and his colleagues published another study that found a statistical link between the buildup of snowfall in Siberia during October and the so-called Arctic Oscillation, a weather pattern that affects the East Coast and Europe during the winter.
The Arctic Oscillation describes the pattern of air pressure that lies between the Arctic and the North Atlantic. When it is in a negative phase, cold air is more easily pushed down from the Arctic and into the United States. Most of the East Coast's snowiest winters — including the epic winters of 2009-10 and 2010-11 — occurred when the Arctic Oscillation was in the negative phase.
As I wrote in the Washington Post in late November, forecasters have long regarded the Arctic Oscillation as virtually unpredictable beyond about two weeks in the future.
Cohen's work suggests that by analyzing Siberian snowfall patterns during October, forecasters can get a good idea how the Arctic Oscillation will behave during the winter months. As I reported for the Post:
His study... shows a statistically significant link between the rate of change in Siberian snow cover during October and the dominant phase of the Arctic Oscillation during the following winter. A rapid advance of Siberian snow cover, Cohen and his colleague Justin Jones found, is linked with the negative phase. A slow advance, by contrast, is linked with a positive oscillation, which brings milder winter weather to Washington.
Cohen claims that rapidly advancing snow cover in Siberia can set off a chain of events from Earth’s surface to the stratosphere. The quick expansion can lead to a large dome of cold high pressure over Siberia. That dome, in turn, perturbs the jet stream so it flows more north to south in addition to west to east, resulting in more intense cold-air outbreaks in eastern North America and western Europe, which often breed snowstorms.
You may be wondering: "How does this explain what's going on this winter?" Well, it does and it doesn't. Siberian snowfall was about average during October 2011, indicating that the Arctic Oscillation would probably wind up close to neutral for the winter season (assuming Cohen's study is correct). So far, however, it has been in positive territory, favoring mild conditions in the East.
As I reported on January 10th, there are signs that the early winter weather pattern is changing, but it's unclear what that will mean for the East Coast and Europe.
 

Amir Mohsen

متخصص بخش هواشناسی
Animated northern hemisphere air temperatures during January and February 2010. The jet stream’s meandering pushes warm air (red) into the Arctic and cold air (blue) to mid-latitudes. The perspective is centered on the North Pole, with the U.S. at left. Image: Judah Cohen & Justin Jones/Atmospheric and Environmental Research

 
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موضوع بسته شده است.
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