Clouds of the Day - A Change of Seasons - Thursday, October 5, 2023
/This morning these Altocumulus and Altostratus clouds were in the sky at sunrise. Rising motion in a southwesterly flow of air through the middle levels of the atmosphere and moisture were enough to reveal a wavy air flow that was impressed on the clouds.
A change of seasons is showing its hand today. The weather map at 1:00 p.m. CDT shows colder air sweeping southeastward from Canada across the Northern Plains to the Central Plains. There are two cold fronts associated with the change. The leading front extends from Michigan to Illinois to Oklahoma. The second much stronger front has reached Lake Superior and extends to Iowa, Kansas into Colorado and then along the Continental Divide through Wyoming and Montana into British Columbia.
The is a good example of how temperatures, dew points, and winds change behind a strong cold front. Cedar Rapids, Iowa report 77 degrees with a dew point of 46, but farther to the northwest Bismarck, North Dakota reported 53 degrees with a dew point of 39 and Rapid City, South Dakota reported a temperature of 61 with a dew point of only 27.
Northwest winds were increasing behind the front and surface barometric pressures were rising as the cold dense air mass and sinking motion spread to the southeast.
A high pressure area of Pacific origin was sprawled over the western United States while the western edge of a high pressure over the Atlantic Ocean was along the Eastern Seaboard. Low pressure with rain was organizing over Louisiana and Arkansas.