Climatological conditions of lake-effect precipitation events associated with the New York state Finger Lakes

Neil Laird, Ryan Sobash, Natasha Hodas

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

27 Scopus citations

Abstract

A climatological analysis was conducted of the environmental and atmospheric conditions that occurred during 125 identified lake-effect (LE) precipitation events in the New York State Finger Lakes region for the 11 winters (October-March) from 1995/96 through 2005/06. The results complement findings from an earlier study reporting on the frequency and temporal characteristics of Finger Lakes LE events that occurred as 1) isolated precipitation bands over and downwind of a lake (NYSFL events), 2) an enhancement of LE precipitation originating from Lake Ontario (LOenh events), 3) an LE precipitation band embedded within widespread synoptic precipitation (SYNOP events), or 4) a transition from one type to another. In comparison with SYNOP and LOenh events, NYSFL events developed with the 1) coldest temperatures, 2) largest lake-air temperature differences, 3) weakest wind speeds, 4) highest sea level pressure, and 5) lowest height of the stable-layer base. Several significant differences in conditions were found when only one or both of Cayuga and Seneca Lakes, the largest Finger Lakes, had LE precipitation as compared with when the smaller Finger Lakes also produced LE precipitation. In addition, transitional events containing an NYSFL time period occurred in association with significantly colder and drier air masses, larger lake-air temperature differences, and a less stable and shallower boundary layer in comparison with those associated with solitary NYSFL events.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)1052-1062
Number of pages11
JournalJournal of Applied Meteorology and Climatology
Volume49
Issue number5
DOIs
StatePublished - May 2010

Keywords

  • Lake effects
  • Mesoscale processes
  • Precipitation
  • Snow
  • Snowbands
  • Snowfall

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