WW2010
University of Illinois

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Moisture Advection
along the 850 mb surface

Moisture advection is horizontal transport of moisture, which plays a very important role in the development of precipitation. If little moisture is available, it is unlikely that precipitation will form. However, if a cyclone is supplied with an abundance of moisture, there is an increased likelihood that heavy precipitation will develop. Regions of moisture advection are often co-located with regions of warm advection. For the regions of greatest moisture advection, look for areas where the geopotential height contours (blue) and isodrosotherms (dashed red) are nearly perpendicular (map below).

[Image: 850 mb heights and dewpoints (40K)]

The greatest moisture advection was occurring from Texas into Illinois, as moist air from the Gulf of Mexico was being advected northward by southerly winds ahead of an intensifying low pressure system.


Terms for using data resources. CD-ROM available.
Credits and Acknowledgments for WW2010.
Department of Atmospheric Sciences (DAS) at
the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign.