|
Jet Streaks Hi, I'm Dave Thurlow from the Mount Washington Observatory and this is The Weather Notebook. Today we're going to talk about jet streaks and no, this isn't what meteorology students did in college. Jet streaks are mini jet streams that help make storms.
We've known about jet 'streams' ever since pilots discovered them in World War II. The main polar jet stream winds around the entire globe, while a jet streak is a smaller and more localized. A jet streak is a speeding car darting through traffic where the jet stream is the highway. Jet streaks are important because they cause air to rise near the ground below. The atmosphere has to adjust to the extra energy delivered by the streak, so air is forced up or down on each side of the jet streak as it comes and goes. These rising and falling air pockets help determine where a storm will form near the ground. The trick is to find these jet streaks before they do their thing. Weather balloons are too far apart to find every jet streak, but scientists are getting better at reading between the data points. And computers can follow a jet streak several days into the future to see where a storm might blossom. Now for more graphics and additional information on jet streaks, be sure to visit our website at weathernotebook.org. Thanks to contributing writer Bob Henson. Our show is underwritten by Subaru, with major support provided by the National Science Foundation.
The Dynamics of Jet Streaks in the Extratropical Upper Troposphere
How jet streaks influence weather |