Term
Why is Montreal so vulnerable to ice storms? |
|
Definition
- cold air gets trapped in the St. Lawrence river valley, causing freezing rain - bimodal wind direction |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
- water below 0 degrees but not solid, freezes to the first object it comes into contact with - freezing rain storm droplets freeze on impact |
|
|
Term
What are synoptic ice storm conditions? |
|
Definition
1. when the north of a warm front and the west of a surface cyclone coolide (72% of events) 2. when the north of a cold front is in a cold- air dome with a high pressure system (52% of events) |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
- when warm moist air (from the gulf of mexico ) meets cold dense air from north - warm air will flow over the cold dense air |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
-layer in which the temperature increases with height - forms when warm moist area from south flows above dome of cold air - the precipitation falls as snow, then melts, and then is cooled again to supercooled water freezes on ice nuceli to make ice pellets |
|
|
Term
What are factors affect the severity of an ice storm? |
|
Definition
Persistence- duration (ex. Mtl ice storm so long) Intensity- how fast is the precipitation Phase- is the liquid supercooled? Location- is the area particularly vulnerable? |
|
|
Term
What made the 1998 Montreal ice storm such an anomaly? |
|
Definition
- most ice storms last less than 5 hours but this one lasted over 5 days - more than 80 hrs of freezing frain in Ottawa and MTL - nearly stationary frontal system - more than one billion dollars in damages - power outages = hypothermia |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
- listen to the radio for freezing rain warnings - try to stay warm! |
|
|