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Weather Abbreviations


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#1 Steve Murr

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Posted 26 January 2005 - 16:11

A quickie on the abbreviations...


WZ- Wetterzentrale ( German website for viewing charts)

NAO- North atlantic oscillation

PNA- Pacific North american

SOI./ENSO- El-Nino Southern oscillation

WAA- Warm air advection

CAA- Cold air advection

528 DAM- is the line drawn on the maps that equated to the temperature ( MAX) that snow can be often observed at

GFS- Global forecasting sytem

METO- Met office model

UKMO- United kingdom Met office

ECM( Or ECMWF) European centre of medium range weather forecasts..

ASL- Above sea level-

PPN- Precipitation

Ensembles- 10 GFS model runs- Control run is the one seen on the models

SST'S sea surface temperatures

PM- Polar maritime air

MT- Maritime Tropical air

PC- Polar Continental air

LRF's - Long range forecasts

MRF's- meduim range forecasts

Trough- Upper level equivalent to a surface Low pressure

Ridge- Upper level equivalent to a surface High pressure

Blocking- The jet stream being moved AROUND CLOCKWISE a large area of high pressure.

Regards

Steve
The Russian high- Slayer of weather models.........

#2 Stratos Ferric

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Posted 28 January 2005 - 14:22

ZDL = freezing ([z]ero [d]egree) level: the altitude at which 0C is reached. Important in considering possibility of snow.
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#3 torzcooper

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Posted 28 January 2005 - 14:51

Steve Murr, on 26 Jan 2005, 05:11 PM, said:

A quickie on the abbreviations...
WZ- Wetterzentrale ( German website for viewing charts)

NAO- North atlantic oscillation

PNA- Pacific North american

SOI./ENSO- El-Nino Southern oscillation

WAA- Warm air advection

CAA- Cold air advection

528 DAM- is the line drawn on the maps that equated to the temperature ( MAX) that snow can be often observed at

GFS- Global forecasting sytem

METO- Met office model

UKMO- United kingdom Met office

ECM( Or ECMWF) European centre of medium range weather forecasts..

ASL- Above sea level-

PPN- Precipitation

Ensembles- 10 GFS model runs- Control run is the one seen on the models

SST'S sea surface temperatures

PM- Polar maritime air

MT- Maritime Tropical air

PC- Polar Continental air

LRF's - Long range forecasts

MRF's- meduim range forecasts

Trough- Upper level equivalent to a surface Low pressure

Ridge- Upper level equivalent to a surface High pressure

Blocking- The jet stream being moved AROUND CLOCKWISE a large area of high pressure.

Regards

Steve

<{POST_SNAPBACK}>



thank god at last, I was beginning to get very confused and starting to make things up just to sound good when my OH, asks me what so and so means.
quick thinking I thought on my behalf :lol:

GFS- Global forecasting sytem my god I got it right :lol: can't be that stupid then :lol:


Many thanks

Edited by torzcooper, 28 January 2005 - 14:53 .

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#4 acbrixton

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Posted 29 January 2005 - 17:21

Steve Murr, on 26 Jan 2005, 05:11 PM, said:

A quickie on the abbreviations...
WZ- Wetterzentrale ( German website for viewing charts)

NAO- North atlantic oscillation

PNA- Pacific North american

SOI./ENSO- El-Nino Southern oscillation

WAA- Warm air advection

CAA- Cold air advection

528 DAM- is the line drawn on the maps that equated to the temperature ( MAX) that snow can be often observed at

GFS- Global forecasting sytem

METO- Met office model

UKMO- United kingdom Met office

ECM( Or ECMWF) European centre of medium range weather forecasts..

ASL- Above sea level-

PPN- Precipitation

Ensembles- 10 GFS model runs- Control run is the one seen on the models

SST'S sea surface temperatures

PM- Polar maritime air

MT- Maritime Tropical air

PC- Polar Continental air

LRF's - Long range forecasts

MRF's- meduim range forecasts

Trough- Upper level equivalent to a surface Low pressure

Ridge- Upper level equivalent to a surface High pressure

Blocking- The jet stream being moved AROUND CLOCKWISE a large area of high pressure.

Regards

Steve

<{POST_SNAPBACK}>


"...whereof one cannot speak, thereof one must be silent."

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#5 Evo

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Posted 29 January 2005 - 18:58

torzcooper, on 28 Jan 2005, 02:51 PM, said:

thank god at last, I was beginning to get very confused and starting to make things up just to sound good when my OH, asks me what so and so means.
quick thinking I thought on my behalf :D

GFS- Global forecasting sytem  my god I got it right :) can't be that stupid then :)
Many thanks

<{POST_SNAPBACK}>


Glad it's not just me. Sometimes I actually know what it stands for but my brain insist on using the "wrong" wording when I read the intial. :)

What about FI? I cannot search the forum because of the tem length limit. I know what it means (I think) but not what it stands for?
Blah blah blah...

#6 IanS

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Posted 29 January 2005 - 21:30

Good to see that others find this thread useful too. Couple more to add to the collection. Taken from another thread where I was wondering what some abbreviations meant....

From Steve M:
PVA stands for positive vorticity advection- when occuring from the subtropical side of the jet stream will potentially allow deeper cyclogenesis across a region because of the raised thermal gradient-

PFJ Polar front jet stream- The jet stream that is the marked boundry between the cold dry air masses from the North and the mild moist ones from the south-
PPN on the northern side is normally in the form of convectice showers where as on the southern side you are more likly to have rain belts from layered clouds....

AO - Arctic Oscillation
- We need a definition for this, any offers?

I would also like to suggest that the first entry on this thread is maintained as a repository for abbreviations. While we do now have this thread, I still urge the more knowledgeable members to use abbreviations rarely in their posts or to at least give the full term once in the text. It will just make post more usable for the majority. OK whinge over. :D :)

Edited by IanS, 29 January 2005 - 21:32 .


#7 Steve Murr

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Posted 30 January 2005 - 12:17

Evo, on 29 Jan 2005, 06:58 PM, said:

Glad it's not just me.  Sometimes I actually know what it stands for but my brain insist on using the "wrong" wording when I read the intial.  :)

What about FI?  I cannot search the forum because of the tem length limit.  I know what it means (I think) but not what it stands for?

<{POST_SNAPBACK}>



EVo-

FI refers to ' Fantasy Island-' The often referred to part of the charts between the hours of T180- T384- always over the rainbow...... and far far away-

S

The Russian high- Slayer of weather models.........

#8 SteveB

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Posted 30 January 2005 - 16:48

This is very helpful Steve I feel as though things are starting to make sense..... but a long long way to go me thinks
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#9 Evo

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Posted 30 January 2005 - 23:36

Steve Murr, on 30 Jan 2005, 12:17 PM, said:


EVo-

FI refers to ' Fantasy Island-' The often referred to part of the charts between the hours of T180- T384-  always over the rainbow......    and far far away-

S

<{POST_SNAPBACK}>


Ahhhh, excellent, thank you!

(By the way I though it meant Far Intervals, so I'm glad I didn't say what I thought it meant.... Oh dang it I just did :) )

I guess this all needs to be collated as suggested by scandhi and put in the Net Weather Guides (not wishing to lecture Granny about the eggs!)
Blah blah blah...

#10 johnholmes

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Posted 30 January 2005 - 23:37

all in the process, but there are so many things going on it may take a time to show up as such.
regards
John

here is my weather station, for local written forecasts or simply browsing further afield.
http://www.johnholmes-weather.co.uk/
see my blog for weather updates as I get time and also my plea for preventing getting skin cancer.

#11 IanS

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Posted 02 February 2005 - 22:40

Another one I had been wondering about:

GIN SEA= Greenland Iceland Corridor where cyclonic genesis occurs. With Atlantic highs keeping the sytems tracking west to east roughly to the north of the UK bringing mild wet stormy weather to the UK.

Edited by IanS, 02 February 2005 - 22:40 .


#12 kold weather

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Posted 04 February 2005 - 18:38

and heres one for summer:

MCS-Meso convective system,a bunch of thunderstorms uniform and become one large system that is able to keep itslef going as new cells keep forming in the system,and so it can go on for a very long time,sometimes for a few days.
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#13 acbrixton

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Posted 04 February 2005 - 23:08

Steve Murr, on 26 Jan 2005, 05:11 PM, said:

A quickie on the abbreviations...
WZ- Wetterzentrale ( German website for viewing charts)

NAO- North atlantic oscillation

PNA- Pacific North american

SOI./ENSO- El-Nino Southern oscillation

WAA- Warm air advection

CAA- Cold air advection

528 DAM- is the line drawn on the maps that equated to the temperature ( MAX) that snow can be often observed at

GFS- Global forecasting sytem

METO- Met office model

UKMO- United kingdom Met office

ECM( Or ECMWF) European centre of medium range weather forecasts..

ASL- Above sea level-

PPN- Precipitation

Ensembles- 10 GFS model runs- Control run is the one seen on the models

SST'S sea surface temperatures

PM- Polar maritime air

MT- Maritime Tropical air

PC- Polar Continental air

LRF's - Long range forecasts

MRF's- meduim range forecasts

Trough- Upper level equivalent to a surface Low pressure

Ridge- Upper level equivalent to a surface High pressure

Blocking- The jet stream being moved AROUND CLOCKWISE a large area of high pressure.

Regards

Steve

<{POST_SNAPBACK}>


"...whereof one cannot speak, thereof one must be silent."

[L. Wittgenstein, Tractatus Logico-Philosophicus (1921)]

#14 acbrixton

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Posted 04 February 2005 - 23:12

acbrixton, on 5 Feb 2005, 12:08 AM, said:

RPM Returning Polar Maritime: basically a polar maritime air mass that is modified by a long sea journey from the north west that and travels around the w armer sea as a south westerly behind a cols front: unstable showery and on the whole fairly mild

regards
ACB
"...whereof one cannot speak, thereof one must be silent."

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#15 johnholmes

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Posted 04 February 2005 - 23:22

tks ACB, have a look at Air Masses in the Net Wxx Guides.
regards
John
ps
welocme to Net Wx.

here is my weather station, for local written forecasts or simply browsing further afield.
http://www.johnholmes-weather.co.uk/
see my blog for weather updates as I get time and also my plea for preventing getting skin cancer.

#16 Snow_Fan_Man

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Posted 05 February 2005 - 23:35

Cool list, now i know what a ridge is (i thought it was an 'arm' of pressure extending out of the origional pressure system, d'oh!)
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#17 Let_it_snow

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Posted 16 February 2005 - 16:47

What is an outlier?
I predict a whiteout

#18 johnholmes

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Posted 16 February 2005 - 16:48

over to the GFS experts, Steve or ?

here is my weather station, for local written forecasts or simply browsing further afield.
http://www.johnholmes-weather.co.uk/
see my blog for weather updates as I get time and also my plea for preventing getting skin cancer.

#19 kold weather

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Posted 27 March 2005 - 14:39

Here is just about every term you'll every come across and a breif description as well:

http://www.crh.noaa..../?page=glossary
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#20 WBSH

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Posted 02 April 2005 - 19:43

...but Steve Murr forgot the most important abbreviation of them all. The one that life would have no meaning without!

...

WBSH - Winter Blizzard Summer Heat

B)
Regards, WBSH