THE FORMATION OF NEW ENGLAND COASTAL FRONTS Academic Article uri icon

abstract

  • Coastal fronts are a frequent late fall and early winter feature of eastern New England weather. Data from a mesoscale observing network is used to describe the process of coastal frontogenesis and to determine the causes of formation. Three distinct types of coastal frontogenesis are found to occur in New England, and examples of each are presented using mesoscale surface maps and time series. Type a coastal fronts form during cold air outbreaks as winds veer from offshore to onshore. Type B coastal fronts form in the evening as air temperatures over land fall below air temperatures over water. Both types of fronts represent thermally direct circulations which are created by heating from the warm sea surface, often in combination with radiational cooling over land. Type C coastal fronts are caused by upstream blocking when a stable region of warm advection, such as warm front, approaches the Appalachian Mountains from the south. Type A and Type B fronts are described in terms of land and sea breeze dynamics. The persistent, quasi-stationary nature of such coastal fronts is investigated with a simple two-layer density current model. It is found that the effects on frontal motion of an increasing onshore wind and heating from the sea surface tend to cancel each other, resulting in fronts which tend to remain stationery just offshore.

published proceedings

  • MONTHLY WEATHER REVIEW

altmetric score

  • 3

author list (cited authors)

  • NIELSEN, J. W.

citation count

  • 26

complete list of authors

  • NIELSEN, JW

publication date

  • July 1989