August 07, 2018

3D Smoke

Satellite imagery shows smoke moving in over head (see below) and our sunsets/sunrises confirm it.



But yet the air quality is very good near the surface, something shown by the measurements of the Puget Sound Clean Air Agency (see below), with the near sea level sites being green (good air quality).   But note that Rainier and a few sites near the Cascade slopes are yellow (moderate air quality)


In contrast, head down to California, and smoke has engulfed the lower atmosphere, as beautifully illustrated by the picture of the region around Mt. Shasta sent to me by Kean Stump.


The NOAA HRRR-smoke forecast predicted this situation. The forecast for total smoke in the column at 5 PM today was scary.


But the smoke forecast at the surface at the same time was pretty benign for the Puget Sound lowlands (see below).  Plenty of smoke in eastern Washington and California at low levels, though


In contrast, there was much more smoke predicted at 6000 ft.


The reason for this pattern?  There was northerly (from the north) winds at low levels over western WA, that brought in clean air from the north and west, while southerly flow aloft moved the California and Oregon smoke northward above us aloft---high enough that it wasn't mixed to the surface.

We can show this by creating backward trajectories of the air at various levels above Seattle--telling us where the air came from over us. This plot (from the wonderful NOAA HYSPLIT model) shows the trajectories ending over Seattle at three heights (100 meters--red, 1500 meters--blue, and 2500 m--green) at 5 AM this morning. The 100m trajectory moved through the Strait of Juan de Fuca...nice clean ocean air.  But the higher trajectories cam from the south (blue and green)--in the middle of smoke land.


We can also do forward trajectories that describe where air will go...here are the forward trajectories from a location over northern California, starting at the same three elevations.  The low-level smoky air (red) moves northward, while rising substantially (to about 4000 meters).  Less rising for air starting at 1500 meters.


The bottom line:  the low-level northerly flow is protecting us today, allowing the smoke to stay aloft.    

Whether we get smoke to the surface is critically dependent on how low the upper smoke layer drops.....if it gets below 5000 ft then vertical mixing can bring it down to the surface during the day.

The situation should be similar on Wednesday.....


6 comments:

  1. Environmental and health effects aside, the fire smoke is a great way to see how the atmosphere behaves. Much like clouds give us visual clues as to what the atmosphere is doing, under clear skies, the smoke, along with the marine layer, help to connect the dots.

    Sort of like dye injected into a body of water to see where it goes, or smoke in a wind tunnel.

    I feel studying the model comparisons to how the smoke actually behaved is a good way to improve models. So I hope someone’s on that. Lol

    ReplyDelete
  2. Based on the info in this article, Cliff, could you opine about prospects for visibility of the Perseid meteor shower in Western WA? I didn't go to my fave viewing site near Verlot because of the smoke last year, and don't want to bother if smoke will impede this year too. Thanks!

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. The “peak” being the second half of the weekend, I’d say chances are high that we have some good viewing. Before the smoke rolled in, I was seeing quite a bit of activity, just casually looking. A lot depends on where you are, as the marine layer could play a part of your close to somewhere that deals regularly with morning clouds (along the sound, chehalis gap, etc)

      Also, with the system coming from offshore, it should help to clear the air. Though we still have fires locally, so it won’t get rid of ALL the smoke.

      Delete
    2. Ditto. Skies here in Seattle look pretty smoky tonight

      Delete
  3. Looking forward to a post tomorrow because my weather app is predicting rain on Saturday & much lower temperatures. Must be some low pressure moving in.

    ReplyDelete
  4. no worries, david. looks like we're back in the high 80s and maybe low 90s next week! viva summer!!!

    ReplyDelete

Please make sure your comments are civil. Name calling and personal attacks are not appropriate.

The Seattle Times Says Washington State is in a Serious Drought. Is this True?

It is more than a little disturbing when a major regional newspaper (the Seattle Times) provides demonstrably inaccurate and deceptive weath...