Examining the Damaging New England Windstorm of 25-26 February 2010 as a Shapiro-Keyser Cyclone...

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Examining the Damaging New England Windstorm of 25-26 February 2010 as a Shapiro-Keyser Cyclone Stacie Hanes/NOAA NWS Gray ME Jim Hayes/NOAA NWS Mount Holly NJ 12 th Northeast Regional Operational Workshop November 3-5, 2010

Transcript of Examining the Damaging New England Windstorm of 25-26 February 2010 as a Shapiro-Keyser Cyclone...

Page 1: Examining the Damaging New England Windstorm of 25-26 February 2010 as a Shapiro-Keyser Cyclone Stacie Hanes/NOAA NWS Gray ME Jim Hayes/NOAA NWS Mount.

Examining the Damaging New England Windstorm of 25-26 February 2010 as a Shapiro-

Keyser Cyclone

Stacie Hanes/NOAA NWS Gray MEJim Hayes/NOAA NWS Mount Holly NJ

12th Northeast Regional Operational Workshop

November 3-5, 2010

Page 2: Examining the Damaging New England Windstorm of 25-26 February 2010 as a Shapiro-Keyser Cyclone Stacie Hanes/NOAA NWS Gray ME Jim Hayes/NOAA NWS Mount.

Outline

• Overview of the event• Review of the structure and evolution of a

Norwegian and a Shapiro-Keyser cyclone• Overview of the synoptic setup prior to the

damaging winds• Use of observational and model data to

identify the structure of Shapiro-Keyser cyclone

Page 3: Examining the Damaging New England Windstorm of 25-26 February 2010 as a Shapiro-Keyser Cyclone Stacie Hanes/NOAA NWS Gray ME Jim Hayes/NOAA NWS Mount.

Brief overview of the event• East to northeast winds

gusted as high as 94 mph during the late evening and overnight of 25-26 Feb 2010

• The strongest gusts occurred with the passage of a surface trough

• Significant damage occurred across southeast New Hampshire and southwest and central Maine

This wind event caused the second largest number of power outages ever in

New Hampshire

Page 4: Examining the Damaging New England Windstorm of 25-26 February 2010 as a Shapiro-Keyser Cyclone Stacie Hanes/NOAA NWS Gray ME Jim Hayes/NOAA NWS Mount.

Brief overview of the event• Three peak wind gusts

of over 90 MPH were recorded during this event

• Portland ME (PWM) had its highest wind gust ever recorded. It may have been higher, but the power failed at the ASOS

Page 5: Examining the Damaging New England Windstorm of 25-26 February 2010 as a Shapiro-Keyser Cyclone Stacie Hanes/NOAA NWS Gray ME Jim Hayes/NOAA NWS Mount.

The highest wind speeds occurred with surface trough between 1100 PM and 200 AM across southeast New Hampshire and southern Maine.

Destructive winds from the east or northeast are fairly rare in northern New England, especially at night.

Page 6: Examining the Damaging New England Windstorm of 25-26 February 2010 as a Shapiro-Keyser Cyclone Stacie Hanes/NOAA NWS Gray ME Jim Hayes/NOAA NWS Mount.

Was this the result of a warm front/occluded frontal passage, or something else?

Page 7: Examining the Damaging New England Windstorm of 25-26 February 2010 as a Shapiro-Keyser Cyclone Stacie Hanes/NOAA NWS Gray ME Jim Hayes/NOAA NWS Mount.

Norwegian Cyclone Model

Typically the strong winds occur in the warm sector in this cyclone model or on the back side in the cold air

advection

Page 8: Examining the Damaging New England Windstorm of 25-26 February 2010 as a Shapiro-Keyser Cyclone Stacie Hanes/NOAA NWS Gray ME Jim Hayes/NOAA NWS Mount.

Norwegian Cyclone Model This cyclone model could account for stronger winds reaching the surface in the “warm sector”, but the low levels appear too stable to allow turbulent mixing in the “cool sector”

This model does not explain the destructive winds on the cold side of the warm/occluded front

Page 9: Examining the Damaging New England Windstorm of 25-26 February 2010 as a Shapiro-Keyser Cyclone Stacie Hanes/NOAA NWS Gray ME Jim Hayes/NOAA NWS Mount.

Shapiro-Keyser Model

I. Open wave (similar to the Norwegian cyclone model

II. Frontal fracture (T bone frontal structure)

III. Bent-back front – strong winds on the cold side of the warm front

IV. Warm seclusion – evaporative cooling/descent can allow an eye-like feature to develop.

Page 10: Examining the Damaging New England Windstorm of 25-26 February 2010 as a Shapiro-Keyser Cyclone Stacie Hanes/NOAA NWS Gray ME Jim Hayes/NOAA NWS Mount.

Shapiro-Keyser model

• Typically develops as a marine cyclone• Generally forms in large scale confluence and

a high zonal index flow• Characterized by a strong warm front, weak

cold front and T bone frontal structure

Page 11: Examining the Damaging New England Windstorm of 25-26 February 2010 as a Shapiro-Keyser Cyclone Stacie Hanes/NOAA NWS Gray ME Jim Hayes/NOAA NWS Mount.

Models were fairly close concerning the overall sequence of events. The 1200 UTC 25 Feb 2010 NAM model solution is

examined.

So now that we have an idea of how the storm should look…what did the

models show?

Page 12: Examining the Damaging New England Windstorm of 25-26 February 2010 as a Shapiro-Keyser Cyclone Stacie Hanes/NOAA NWS Gray ME Jim Hayes/NOAA NWS Mount.

1200 UTC 25 Feb 2010 NAM - 0600 UTC (left) and 0900 UTC (right)

Page 13: Examining the Damaging New England Windstorm of 25-26 February 2010 as a Shapiro-Keyser Cyclone Stacie Hanes/NOAA NWS Gray ME Jim Hayes/NOAA NWS Mount.

1200 UTC 25 Feb 2010 NAM - 0000 UTC (left) and 0300 UTC (right)

Page 14: Examining the Damaging New England Windstorm of 25-26 February 2010 as a Shapiro-Keyser Cyclone Stacie Hanes/NOAA NWS Gray ME Jim Hayes/NOAA NWS Mount.

1200 UTC 25 Feb 2010 NAM - 0600 UTC (left) and 0900 UTC (right)

Page 15: Examining the Damaging New England Windstorm of 25-26 February 2010 as a Shapiro-Keyser Cyclone Stacie Hanes/NOAA NWS Gray ME Jim Hayes/NOAA NWS Mount.
Page 16: Examining the Damaging New England Windstorm of 25-26 February 2010 as a Shapiro-Keyser Cyclone Stacie Hanes/NOAA NWS Gray ME Jim Hayes/NOAA NWS Mount.

Bottom line• The NAM was

forecasting a highly anomalous event for northern New England– Many forecast

parameters showed departures of 4 to 5 standard deviations

– Main time frame was 0300 UTC to 0900 UTC for the forecast area

Page 17: Examining the Damaging New England Windstorm of 25-26 February 2010 as a Shapiro-Keyser Cyclone Stacie Hanes/NOAA NWS Gray ME Jim Hayes/NOAA NWS Mount.

Examining the Shapiro-Keyser cyclone environment using

observational tools

Page 18: Examining the Damaging New England Windstorm of 25-26 February 2010 as a Shapiro-Keyser Cyclone Stacie Hanes/NOAA NWS Gray ME Jim Hayes/NOAA NWS Mount.

0015z 26 Feb 2010 IR image – the cyclone is the in bent-back front stage (Stage III)

Page 19: Examining the Damaging New England Windstorm of 25-26 February 2010 as a Shapiro-Keyser Cyclone Stacie Hanes/NOAA NWS Gray ME Jim Hayes/NOAA NWS Mount.

0000 UTC 26 Feb 2010 GYX observed sounding

The depth of the mixed later is unusual for an easterly flow at night

Page 20: Examining the Damaging New England Windstorm of 25-26 February 2010 as a Shapiro-Keyser Cyclone Stacie Hanes/NOAA NWS Gray ME Jim Hayes/NOAA NWS Mount.

0255 UTC 26 FEB 2010 AMDAR descent sounding at BOS 60 knot wind at

1210 ft.

Page 21: Examining the Damaging New England Windstorm of 25-26 February 2010 as a Shapiro-Keyser Cyclone Stacie Hanes/NOAA NWS Gray ME Jim Hayes/NOAA NWS Mount.
Page 22: Examining the Damaging New England Windstorm of 25-26 February 2010 as a Shapiro-Keyser Cyclone Stacie Hanes/NOAA NWS Gray ME Jim Hayes/NOAA NWS Mount.

0415z 26 Feb 2010 IR image – the cyclone is the in warm seclusion stage (Stage IV)

Page 23: Examining the Damaging New England Windstorm of 25-26 February 2010 as a Shapiro-Keyser Cyclone Stacie Hanes/NOAA NWS Gray ME Jim Hayes/NOAA NWS Mount.
Page 24: Examining the Damaging New England Windstorm of 25-26 February 2010 as a Shapiro-Keyser Cyclone Stacie Hanes/NOAA NWS Gray ME Jim Hayes/NOAA NWS Mount.
Page 25: Examining the Damaging New England Windstorm of 25-26 February 2010 as a Shapiro-Keyser Cyclone Stacie Hanes/NOAA NWS Gray ME Jim Hayes/NOAA NWS Mount.
Page 26: Examining the Damaging New England Windstorm of 25-26 February 2010 as a Shapiro-Keyser Cyclone Stacie Hanes/NOAA NWS Gray ME Jim Hayes/NOAA NWS Mount.
Page 27: Examining the Damaging New England Windstorm of 25-26 February 2010 as a Shapiro-Keyser Cyclone Stacie Hanes/NOAA NWS Gray ME Jim Hayes/NOAA NWS Mount.

Summary• Damaging winds occurred in northern New England

during the late evening of 25 February 2010 and the early morning of 26 February 2010– Damage was caused by east to northeast winds during

an unusual time– A few locations had maximum wind gusts over 90

MPH• PWM had its high wind gust ever before the ASOS power

failed

• The damaging winds occurred in the cold air ahead of the warm front, which suggests a Shapiro-Keyser cyclone