Dr. Jeff Masters' WunderBlog

New England flooding, air pollution, and the season's first typhoon
Posted by: Dr. Jeff Masters, 2:05 PM GMT op 15 mei 2006 +0
Major flooding has hit southern New Hampshire, southwest Maine, and northeast Massachussetts today, where more than 10 inches of rain has fallen in the past four days. The culprit is a "cut off low", a large low pressure system over the Great Lakes that got separated from the jet stream on Thursday, and has stayed almost stationary since since then, with no upper level winds to push it along. The counter-clockwise flow of air around the low has drawn copious amounts of moist oceanic air over New England. The rains from this moisture have brought the Warner river at Davisville and the Smith River at Bristol to flood stage this morning. With another 1-2 inches of rain expected across the region today, these rivers should crest several feet above flood stage, with moderate to major flooding. The cut-off low is expected to drift slowly northeastward today and get re-absorbed by the jet stream on Tuesday, which will finally bring an end to the worst of the rains. Howver, the weather pattern over the next week is expected to remain wet over the eastern half of the U.S., and more rain is expected in the Northeast later this week as the jet stream continues to remain in a typical Springtime active pattern.


Figure 1. Rainfall amounts for New England estimated by radar, ending at 8:30am EDT Monday May 15.

Air pollution season is here
May marks the beginning of air pollution season in the U.S., when summertime brings the hot temperatures, high amounts of UV radiation, and stagnant air that can trigger air pollution "Action Days". This week marks the annual observance of Air Pollution Awareness week, and at EPA's request, I will be writing several blogs highlighting air pollution. In particular, I'll discuss why one of NOAA's P-3 hurricane hunter airplanes will be in Texas for air pollution research this hurricane season, instead of flying hurricanes.

Quick intro on air pollution
Today, I'll present a quick summary of what pollutants we're concerned about. The Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) calculates the Air Quality Index (AQI) for five major air pollutants regulated by the Clean Air Act: ground-level ozone, particle pollution, carbon monoxide, sulfur dioxide, and nitrogen dioxide. Ozone and particle pollution are the two most serious pollutants in the U.S. Particle pollution alone has been estimated to cause over 20,000 premature deaths the U.S. each year, and 800,000 worldwide (although the exact mortality numbers and definition of "premature deaths" is controversial).

Ozone is a colorless gas composed of three atoms of oxygen. Ozone forms both in the Earth's upper atmosphere and at the surface. Where ozone forms determines whether it is helpful or harmful to your health.

Good ozone naturally forms in the stratosphere, a layer of air about 10 - 30 miles (16 - 48 km) above Earth's
surface. This protective layer shields us from the sun's harmful ultraviolet rays. Without this layer, we would all be blinded and sunburned. Unfortunately, human-created chemicals are destroying this beneficial layer of ozone. Over the South Pole in springtime, the ozone loss is so severe that an "Ozone Hole" forms, letting significant amounts of harmful ultraviolet light reach the surface.

Ozone from the stratosphere sometimes gets transported to the surface, particularly in high mountainous regions. Hikers on Mt. Everest who don't use bottled oxygen can be at risk of death from breathing poisonous levels of ozone near the mountain's summit in some weather conditions.

Bad ozone forms near Earth's surface when the ultraviolet light in sunlight triggers a chemical reaction with "precursor pollutants" emitted by cars, power plants, and industrial sources. These precursor pollutants consist of nitrogen oxides (NOx) and volatile organic hydrocarbons (VOC). Ozone near ground level is a harmful pollutant. Ozone pollution isn't limited to big cities like Los Angeles, Houston and New York. It's also found in smaller cities like Raleigh, NC and Cincinnati, OH. It can be a problem in rural areas, including some national parks. Ozone and the pollutants that react to form it (NOx and VOCs) can also be carried on the wind to affect air quality in urban and rural areas hundreds of miles away.

Particle pollution is a mixture of microscopic solids and liquid droplets suspended in air. This pollution, also known as particulate matter, is made up of a number of components, including acids (such as nitrates and sulfates), organic chemicals, metals, soil or dust particles, and allergens (such as fragments of pollen or mold spores). Unlike summertime ozone, particle pollution can occur year-round. It is worst in summer, though, when winds are lighter and the air becomes more stagnant.

Particles come in a wide range of sizes. Fine particles are less than 2.5 micrometers in diameter. How small is that? About 1/30th the diameter of the average human hair--so small, you'd need an electron microscope to see them.

Some fine particles can be emitted directly (think of smoke from a woodstove). But most are formed secondarily from complex atmospheric reactions of gases such as NOx and sulfur dioxide (SO2), that are emitted from power plants, industries, cars, buses and trucks. These fine particles are the worst for your health, since their small size allows then to penetrate deep into your lungs.

Inhalable coarse particles are larger than 2.5 and up to 10 micrometers in diameter. Sources of coarse particles include crushing or grinding operations and dust stirred up by vehicles traveling on roads. These particles are not as injurious to your health, as their large size allows them to be filtered out more readily by your nose before they reach your lungs.

Typhoon Chanchu
The season's first typhoon, a Category 4 storm with 140 mph winds named Chanchu, has turned north, and is now threatening to strike Hong Hong on Wednesday. Chanchu briefly made it to supertyphoon status on Sunday, when it had 150 mph sustained winds and a 910 mb central pressure. This was good enough for a Category 4 rating on the U.S. Saffir-Simpson scale, but not Category 5--which starts at 156 mph. A supertyphoon is defined as any tropical cyclone in the Western Pacific that attains maximum sustained winds of 150 mph. It is not unusual to get a supertyphoon in May, and this last happened in 2004, when Supertyphoon Nida reached Category 5 status with sustained winds of 160 mph. I'll have more on Typhoon Chanchu tomorrow.


Figure 2. Typhoon Chanchu at peak intensity Sunday, with 150 mph sustained winds and a 910 mb pressure.

Jeff Masters
Spicket River Rises (sabre1100)
Prime water front property for sale...at a barbain price no doubt
Spicket River Rises
York Beach flooding (SkyLazaria)
Mothers Day flooding in York Beach, Maine.
York Beach flooding
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Reader Comments
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401. Alec 3:44 AM GMT op 16 mei 2006    
WELL guys lets all come to my blog!!!lol




It will be cooler than normal here in Tally till the weekend!
402. taco2me61 3:45 AM GMT op 16 mei 2006    
Yea Progressive it will blow -up tomorrow and FL does need the rain... I'm not sure if they need it all at one time...


Taco:0)
Member Since: 7 juli 2005 Posts: 6 Comments: 2763
403. GPTGUY 3:45 AM GMT op 16 mei 2006    
Biloxi is doing ok revenue in the city is up as it is in Gulfport...3 of Biloxi's casinos are open so that helps...debris is about 85% picked up...its places to the west like Long Beach, Pass Christian, Bay St. Louis and Waveland that are in real bad shape...in most places it looks like the hurricane hit last week
Member Since: 26 augustus 2005 Posts: 0 Comments: 391
404. TheLuckyTacoBlizzard 3:46 AM GMT op 16 mei 2006    
Posted By: Alec at 3:44 AM GMT on May 16, 2006.
WELL guys lets all come to my blog!!!lol


or to my blog lol


sorry i had to say it
406. Alec 3:48 AM GMT op 16 mei 2006    
TB- you left out the part where it said !!!lol

sorry for the off topic posts, im gonna have a timeout in my blog!.....whoooooosh!
407. TheLuckyTacoBlizzard 3:48 AM GMT op 16 mei 2006    
GPTGUY how your home doing? did they get all the stoplight back up and working?
408. Alec 3:51 AM GMT op 16 mei 2006    
darn! parts my posts are disappearing!!!Im gone for real(in the safety of my safeharbor blog) SOMEONES STALKING MY POSTS!!
409. louastu 3:51 AM GMT op 16 mei 2006    
Or to mine.

Oh wait, I haven't posted anything yet.
410. GPTGUY 3:51 AM GMT op 16 mei 2006    
my home lost the roof, and had a tree fall and take out my window unit A/C which in turn pulled the window out of the house, and i lost my car..but other than that i was blessed compared to many other people!!! and all the stoplights are up and running in most places..stop signs are up where there used to be stoplights
Member Since: 26 augustus 2005 Posts: 0 Comments: 391
411. ProgressivePulse 3:54 AM GMT op 16 mei 2006    
That is the truth Taco, not all at one time, BUT, we'll take what we can get when we can get it. I am thinking we'll get a little less punch that is forcasted. In my local area anyway, south and north counties already have 3 inches today. Have to see what the day brings tomorrow, good to chat with everyone, have a good night!

Ryan
Member Since: 19 augustus 2005 Posts: 5 Comments: 4326
412. taco2me61 3:57 AM GMT op 16 mei 2006    
You too Ryan,

I do hope you get some rain, just not flooding if you know what I mean...


Taco:0)
Member Since: 7 juli 2005 Posts: 6 Comments: 2763
413. snowboy 4:26 AM GMT op 16 mei 2006    
Hey folks, not to be a nag but remember Dr. Masters' post about trying to keep chit chat off this main blog? Just logged on and scrolled through a great many posts, with not much substantive weather-related content in evidence.

It might have been better to actually take up TacoBlizzard's invitation and move the chat there. Not a big issue now, but increasingly so as the tropics heat up. Ok?
Member Since: 21 september 2005 Posts: 10 Comments: 2546
415. taco2me61 4:36 AM GMT op 16 mei 2006    
Can anyone tell me if the blob that is coming across Mexico going to have a chance once it gets in the Gulf???

Now I do understand that the sheer is still out there but I think some of yall said that the sheer would slow down...


just wondering
Taco:0)
Member Since: 7 juli 2005 Posts: 6 Comments: 2763
416. TheLuckyTacoBlizzard 4:39 AM GMT op 16 mei 2006    
well look likesome one love me lol
417. taco2me61 4:43 AM GMT op 16 mei 2006    
Well good nite all I will be chating tomorrow...
Member Since: 7 juli 2005 Posts: 6 Comments: 2763
418. Alec 4:44 AM GMT op 16 mei 2006    
chating?....lol
419. arcturus 5:41 AM GMT op 16 mei 2006    
That's one large thunderstorm complex moving due north towards flood ravaged Rhode Island in the next hour...not good.




420. arcturus 5:49 AM GMT op 16 mei 2006    
Latest radar snapshot.

Photobucket - Video and Image Hosting
421. ProgressivePulse 6:07 AM GMT op 16 mei 2006    


Ummmm I Think we'll finally get some rain, what do you think? lol!
Member Since: 19 augustus 2005 Posts: 5 Comments: 4326
422. ProgressivePulse 6:08 AM GMT op 16 mei 2006    
Nothing like a white out in South Fla, haha.
Member Since: 19 augustus 2005 Posts: 5 Comments: 4326
423. arcturus 6:11 AM GMT op 16 mei 2006    
This years story is dry as a desert or wet as a rainforest.

424. desertdisaster 1:50 PM GMT op 16 mei 2006    
How the 2006 Hurricane Season Will Compare to the 2005 Season...

Following on the heels of 2005's record-shattering hurricane season, 2006 will feature fewer storms, but will still be a season of above-average storm frequency. "There were 28 named storms last year, and we are expecting far fewer storms during this season. But keep in mind that it is not the number of storms that is significant, it is where they make landfall that sets the tone for the season,

See the landfall prdiction here:
Link

Full story here:

Link
425. weatherguy03 1:55 PM GMT op 16 mei 2006    
Posted By: snowboy at 12:26 AM EDT on May 16, 2006.
Hey folks, not to be a nag but remember Dr. Masters' post about trying to keep chit chat off this main blog? Just logged on and scrolled through a great many posts, with not much substantive weather-related content in evidence


Do you ever have any constructive to say? It was late at night and they were having fun, leave them alone..LOL When you make the rules, then we will listen to you..LOL Have a nice day! Go Rain!
Member Since: 5 juli 2005 Posts: 581 Comments: 29680
426. TampaSteve 2:14 PM GMT op 16 mei 2006    
Finally getting some more, much-needed, rain here in Tampa...
427. Cancunguy 3:47 PM GMT op 16 mei 2006    
We are thankful for last night´s rain in the Yucatan. It helped put out some nasty fires that had been burning for a while. The tropical rainforests had been rendered dry from Emily and Wilma last year!

This kind of rain, with no hurricane strength winds and no storm surge are always welcome.
428. Levi32 3:53 PM GMT op 16 mei 2006    
How do you post those regional radar images when the entire picture is full of links?
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About JeffMasters
Jeff co-founded the Weather Underground in 1995 while working on his Ph.D. He flew with the NOAA Hurricane Hunters from 1986-1990.

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