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Closed low

chrisbray

EF4
Joined
Apr 24, 2012
Messages
478
Location
Bourbonnais, Illinois
In my local nws forecast this morning they are talking about the forecast closed low Friday morning, it says "FOR PLACEMENT AND MOVEMENT OF THE CLOSED LOW WHICH IS FORECAST AT
ALMOST THREE STANDARDIZED ANOMALIES BELOW NORMAL AT 500MB..."

What exactly does that mean? Just the intensity of the low at 500mb w respect to height or pressure?

Thanks
 
A closed low is one that has isobars forming a complete circle. I think he's more referring to a cutoff low, which is when the low separates from the main jet streams and hangs out for a few days.
 
A closed low is one that has isobars forming a complete circle. I think he's more referring to a cutoff low, which is when the low separates from the main jet streams and hangs out for a few days.

I guess I should clarify, I understand the closed/ cutoff low. Just the 3 standard anomalies part is what I am wondering about.
 
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Statistics at 500 hPa is usually in terms of geopotential height.
 
Rob is right. If you assume the climatological geopotential height distribution at any one location is approximately normally distributed (Gaussian), then only about 0.2% of the entire distribution is 3 or more standard deviations away from the mean. Quite rare, indeed.
 
Looks like it is both a closed low and a cutoff low.

At any rate, just sounds like a poor choice of wording. A standard deviation is just that - and there's no need to confuse the term by substituting something like "standard anomaly." I could see the popular press doing that, but not the NWS.
 
"Standard anomaly" IS the term of choice for ALL weather organizations...operational and research...that I've ever seen.
 
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