Low-Pressure Area
In
Meteorology, What Is a Low-Pressure Area?
Does low air pressure always mean stormy weather?
When you see a red capital letter "L" on a weather
map, you're looking at a symbolic representation of a low-pressure area, also
known as a "low."
A low is an area where air pressure is lower than it is in the
areas surrounding it.
As a general rule of thumb, lows have a pressure of around 1,000
millibars (29.54 inches of mercury).
Here is how these low-pressure systems form and how they affect
the weather.
How Low-Pressure Areas Form
In order for a low to form, the flow of air must move from one
place to another, decreasing the air pressure over a certain spot.
This happens when the atmosphere tries to even out a temperature
contrast, like that which exists at the boundary between cold and warm air
masses.
This is why low-pressure areas are always accompanied by a warm
front and cold front; the differing air masses are responsible for creating the
low center.
Low Pressure Typically Equals
Unsettled Weather
It's a general rule of meteorology that when air rises, it cools
and condenses.
This is because the temperature is higher in the upper part of
the atmosphere. As water vapor condenses, it creates clouds, precipitation, and
generally unsettled weather.
Because air rises near areas of low pressure, this type of
weather often occurs in lows.
The kind of unsettled weather a location sees during the passage
of a low-pressure system depends on where it is relative to the accompanying
warm and cold fronts.
·
Locations in front of a low center (out ahead of the warm front)
typically see cool temperatures and steady precipitation.
·
Locations to the south and east of a low center (a region known
as the "warm sector") will see warm, moist weather.
Because winds flow counterclockwise around a low in the Northern
Hemisphere, winds in the warm sector are generally from the south, which results
in milder air being fed into the system.
Showery precipitation and thunderstorms also occur here, but they
are specifically at the boundary of a warm sector and the leading edge of the
cold front.
·
Locations behind or to the west of a low center will see cold,
dry weather. This is because the counterclockwise flow of winds around the low
are from a northerly direction, suggesting colder temperatures.
It's also typical to see conditions clearing here as the colder,
denser air is more stable.
While it's possible to generalize and say that low pressure
automatically means stormy weather, every low-pressure area is unique.
For instance, mild or extreme weather conditions develop based on
the strength of the low-pressure system.
Some lows are weak and only produce light rain and moderate
temperatures, while others may be strong enough to produce severe thunderstorms, tornadoes, or a major
winter storm.
If a low is unusually intense, it can even take on the
characteristics of a hurricane.
Sometimes surface lows can extend upward into the middle layers
of the atmosphere. When this happens, they are known as "troughs."
Troughs are long areas of low pressure that can also lead to weather events like rain and wind.
Tiffany Means
Meteorology Expert
Education
B.S.,
Atmospheric Sciences and M
Introduction
Studied
atmospheric sciences and meteorology at the University of North Carolina
Former
administrative assistant for the National Oceanic and Atmospheric
Administration
Member
of the American Meteorological Society
Experience
Tiffany
Means is a former writer for ThoughtCo who contributed articles about weather
for five years. She has interned with the domestic and international
weather departments at CNN, written monthly climate reports for NOAA’s National Centers for
Environmental Prediction, and participated in a number of science outreach
events, including the Science Olympiad Competition. Means
has personally experienced such weather greats as the Blizzard of
1993 and the floods of Hurricane Francis (2004) and Ivan (2004).
Education
Bachelor's
degree in atmospheric sciences and meteorology from the University of North
Carolina at Asheville
ThoughtCo and
Dotdash
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https://www.thoughtco.com/what-is-a-low-pressure-area-3444141
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