Abstract
Abstract. The mistral is a northerly low-level jet blowing through the
Rhône valley in southern France and down to the Gulf of Lion. It is
co-located with the cold sector of a low-level lee cyclone in the Gulf of
Genoa, behind an upper-level trough north of the Alps. The mistral wind has
long been associated with extreme weather events in the Mediterranean, and
while extensive research focused on the lower-tropospheric mistral and
lee cyclogenesis, the different upper-tropospheric large- and synoptic-scale
settings involved in producing the mistral wind are not generally known.
Here, the isentropic potential vorticity (PV) structures governing the
occurrence of the mistral wind are classified using a self-organizing map
(SOM) clustering algorithm. Based upon a 36-year (1981–2016) mistral
database and daily ERA-Interim isentropic PV data, 16 distinct
mistral-associated PV structures emerge. Each classified flow pattern
corresponds to a different type or stage of the Rossby wave life cycle, from
broad troughs to thin PV streamers to distinguished cutoffs. Each of these
PV patterns exhibits a distinct surface impact in terms of the surface
cyclone, surface turbulent heat fluxes, wind, temperature and precipitation.
A clear seasonal separation between the clusters is evident, and transitions
between the clusters correspond to different Rossby-wave-breaking processes.
This analysis provides a new perspective on the variability of the mistral
and of the Genoa lee cyclogenesis in general, linking the upper-level PV
structures to their surface impact over Europe, the Mediterranean and north
Africa.
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13 articles.
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