Inicio  /  Atmósfera  /  Vol: 19 Núm: 3 Par: 0 (2006)  /  Artículo
ARTÍCULO
TITULO

Spatial influence and oceanic thermal response to Santa Ana events along the Baja California Peninsula

R. CASTRO    
A. MASCARENHAS    
A. MARTÍNEZ DÍAZ DE LEÓN    
R. DURAZO    
E. GIL SILVA    

Resumen

Meteorological data were recorded at eight stations located along the coast of the Pacific Ocean and three along the coast of the Gulf of California, aimed to assess the spatial influence of Santa Ana weather conditions in the Baja California Peninsula. February 2002 featured two Santa Ana events: one from the 9 to the 12 and another from the 21 to the 22. The first Santa Ana event had the strongest winds, however relative humidity and temperature behaved similarly on both events at some stations. Data from the Pacific Ocean showed typical Santa Ana condition patterns: wind speed and temperature increase opposed to decreased relative humidity values. Data from the Gulf of California did not show the typical temperature rise of a Santa Ana condition, but there was a decrease on the amplitude of the diurnal variability of air temperature and relative humidity as well as a marked increase on wind strength. Wind direction during the Santa Ana events on the Pacific side was NE and NW on the Gulf of California. NE winds are associated to the shift on the position of the North Pacific High Pressure Center, which moves towards the continent. Data suggest that relative humidity may be the best parameter to monitor both occurrence and length of Santa Ana conditions on the Pacific side. Normal weather conditions show a negative air-sea temperature difference, but during both Santa Ana events this difference was positive and higher than 10 ºC. Latent and sensible heat fluxes drastically increased during both events, reaching values more than three times higher than those for normal conditions, which is due to the presence of strong winds combined with a drier and hotter air mass over the ocean.

 Artículos similares

       
 
?tefan Bila?co and Titus-Cristian Man    
On a global scale, traffic incidents are a leading cause of mortality and material damage. Romania exhibits the highest rate of road traffic fatalities both in the European Union and worldwide, requiring a comprehensive examination of its overall influen... ver más
Revista: Applied Sciences

 
Samuel Haeuser, Richard H. J. Kim, Joong-Mok Park, Randall K. Chan, Muhammad Imran, Thomas Koschny and Jigang Wang    
One manifestation of light-Weyl fermion interaction is the emergence of chiral magnetic effects under magnetic fields. Probing real space magnetic responses at terahertz (THz) scales is challenging but highly desired, as the local responses are less affe... ver más
Revista: Instruments

 
Qiuyang Dai, Faxing Lu and Junfei Xu    
Geodetic coordinate information and attitude information of the observation platform are necessary for multi-UAV position alignment and target tracking. In a complex sea environment, the navigation equipment of a UAV is susceptible to interference. High-... ver más
Revista: Aerospace

 
Ángela Fontán-Bouzas, Tiago Abreu, Caroline C. Ferreira, Paulo A. Silva, Laura López-Olmedilla, José Guitián, Ana M. Bernabeu and Javier Alcántara-Carrió    
The morphological responses of two mesotidal beaches located in different coastal settings (embayed and open sandy beaches) on the northwestern Iberian coast were monitored during the winter of 2018/19. The offshore wave time series analysis is related t... ver más

 
Xie Lian, Xiaolong Hu, Liangsheng Shi, Jinhua Shao, Jiang Bian and Yuanlai Cui    
The parameters of the GR4J-CemaNeige coupling model (GR4neige) are typically treated as constants. However, the maximum capacity of the production store (parX1) exhibits time-varying characteristics due to climate variability and vegetation coverage chan... ver más
Revista: Water