I've read mention of that book on Netweather - I might have to procure a copy!I bought a fun little book called the met office pocket cloud book, it gives reference photos to identify clouds then explains formation and possible weather implications. It was cheap on Amazon.
As with the Norwegian cyclone model, an incipient cyclone develops cold and warm fronts, but in this case, the cold front moves roughly perpendicular to the warm front such that the fronts never meet, the so-called 'T-bone'. Also, a weakness appears along the poleward portion of the cold front near the low center, the so-called 'frontal fracture' and a back-bent front forms behind the low center. (In the final stage), colder air encircles warmer air near the low center, forming a warm seclusion. Typically, the Shapiro-Keyser cyclone is oblong, elongated east-west along the strong warm front
I assure you, Johnny, the irony wasn't lost on me!That's more than enough chat about ' rapidly developing depressions ' from you m8 ! Just remember that when you're not here no one else fills in for you ... so we have no weather !
JohnnyO. o/
I assure you, Johnny, the irony wasn't lost on me!
Rather cold today, wasn't it?
I had no problem with that one, though I had to look up triple point (again) to remind myself...BTW, I'd appreciate any feedback or complaints regarding how understandable yesterdays' 'lesson' post was, please (perhaps via. PM if preferred?) - thanks.
I had no problem with that one, though I had to look up triple point (again) to remind myself...
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