Litcius/Paper detail

Origin of Moisture for the Precipitation Produced by the Exceptional Winter Storm Formed over the Gulf of Mexico in March 1993

Patricia Coll‐Hidalgo, Albenis Pérez‐Alarcón, Luís Gimeno

2022Atmosphere16 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

On 12–15 March 1993, a severe winter storm (SC93) formed over the Gulf of Mexico, affecting the Caribbean Islands and the eastern coast of the United States (US) and Canada with a notable amount of precipitation, snow and severe local storms. In this study, we investigate the origin of the precipitation generated by SC93 by applying a widely used Lagrangian moisture source diagnostic method. Our findings revealed that most of the moisture came from the western North Atlantic Ocean, the Caribbean Sea and the Gulf of Mexico. Moreover, the eastern US and Mexico acted as notable terrestrial moisture sources. Overall, the moisture contribution from the oceanic origin was higher than the terrestrial counterpart, and the moisture sources progressively shifted northward as the storm moved. In addition, the moisture uptake mainly occurred in the cyclone–anticyclone interaction region.

Topics & Concepts

AnticycloneMoisturePrecipitationStormClimatologyWinter stormSnowOceanographyEnvironmental scienceCyclone (programming language)Atlantic hurricaneGeologyGeographyMeteorologyComputer hardwareField-programmable gate arrayComputer scienceTropical and Extratropical Cyclones ResearchClimate variability and modelsMeteorological Phenomena and Simulations