Dr. Jeff Masters' WunderBlog

Moscow hits 102°F; hottest day ever in Finland; 90L a long-range theat
Posted by: Dr. Jeff Masters, 01:54 AM GMT del 30 Luglio 2010 +3
At 4pm local time today in Moscow, Russia, the temperature surpassed 100°F for the first time in recorded history. The high temperature of 100.8°F (37.8°C) recorded at the Moscow Observatory, the official weather location for Moscow, beat Moscow's previous record of 99.5°F (37.5°C), set just three days ago, on July 26. Prior to 2010, Moscow's hottest temperature of all-time was 36.6°C (98.2°F), set in August, 1920. Records in Moscow go back to 1879. Baltschug, another official downtown Moscow weather site, hit an astonishing 102.2°F (39.0°C) today. Finland also recorded its hottest temperature in its history today, when the mercury hit 99°F (37.2°C) at Joensuu. The old (undisputed) record was 95°F (35°C) at Jvaskyla on July 9, 1914. There is little relief in sight, as the latest forecast for Moscow predicts continued highs in the 90s for most of the coming week.

A remarkable year for extreme heat
Finland's new national heat record makes it the fourteenth country (or semi-independent territory) to break an all-time hottest temperature record this year. My source for extreme temperature records is Chris Burt, author of the book Extreme Weather. July in Moscow is easily going to smash the record for hottest month in Moscow's history. By my rough estimate, the temperature has been 18°F (10°C) above average this month. The record hottest July, in 1938, had temperatures 5.3°C above average. Given that the planet as a whole has seen record high temperatures the past four months in a row, it should not be a surprise to see unprecedented heat waves like the Russian heat wave. A record warm planet "loads the dice" in favor of regional heat waves more extreme than anything experienced in recorded history.


Figure 1. Russia's heat wave has contributed to a severe fire season this July. Fires on dry peat bogs east of Moscow are covering the city with smoke as this photo taken yesterday (July 28, 2010.) Tiny red dots indicate hot spots of high surface temperatures associated with fires, and multiple clusters of such dots appear east of Moscow. Dull gray smoke mixes with opaque white clouds east and northeast of the capital city. Air pollution levels in Moscow due to the smoke and smog are so high that residents have been warned to stay home rather than go in to work. Firefighters are battling 340 blazes across Russia covering 86,658 hectares (214,136 acres) amid a drought that led the government to declare weather-related emergencies in 23 crop-producing regions. Agriculture Minister Yelena Skrynnik said on July 23 that the drought had damaged 10.1 million hectares, or 32 percent of all land under cultivation, according to Bloomberg. Raging fires have destroyed hundreds of houses across Russia today and forced mass evacuations in the city of Voronezh, 300 miles southeast of Moscow, according to the Associated Press. Image credit: NASA's Aqua satellite.

Fourteen extreme national high temperature records have been set in 2010
This year now ranks in second place for the most number of countries that have set extreme heat records, according to a list supplied to me today by Chris Burt. The new list removes a number of old disputed records, resulting in the year 2007 surpassing 2010 as the year with the most extreme heat records--fifteen. Keep in mind that the matter of determining extreme records is very difficult, and it is often a judgment call as to whether an old record is reliable or not. The list of countries (225) includes islands that are not independent countries, such as Puerto Rico and Greenland. One-third (33%) of those heat records were set in the past ten years. Ten years have had extreme heat records set at five or more countries on Mr. Burt's list:

2007: 15 records
2010: 14 records
2003: 12 records
2005: 11 records
1998: 9 records
1983: 9 records
2009: 6 records
2000: 5 records
1999: 5 records
1987: 5 records

I highly recommend the book Extreme Weather by Chris Burt for those interested in weather records. I thank Mr. Burt and weather record researchers Maximiliano Herrera and Howard Rainford for their assistance identifying this year's new extreme temperature records. Here's a list of the fourteen nations that have set extreme heat records this year:

Finland recorded its hottest temperature on July 29, 2010, when the mercury hit 99°F (37.2°C) at Joensuu. The old (undisputed) record was 95°F (35°C) at Jvaskyla on July 9, 1914.

Qatar had its hottest temperature in history on July 14, 2010, when the mercury hit 50.4°C (122.7°F) at Doha Airport.

Russia had its hottest temperature in history on July 11, when the mercury rose to 44.0°C (111.2°F) in Yashkul, Kalmykia Republic, in the European portion of Russia near the Kazakhstan border. The previous hottest temperature in Russia (not including the former Soviet republics) was the 43.8°C (110.8°F) reading measured at Alexander Gaj, Kalmykia Republic, on August 6, 1940. The remarkable heat in Russia this year has not been limited just to the European portion of the country--the Asian portion of Russia also recorded its hottest temperature in history this year, a 42.3°C (108.1°F) reading at Belogorsk, near the Amur River border with China. The previous record for the Asian portion of Russia was 41.7°C (107.1°F) at nearby Aksha on July 21, 2004.

Sudan recorded its hottest temperature in its history on June 25 when the mercury rose to 49.6°C (121.3°F) at Dongola. The previous record was 49.5°C (121.1°F) set in July 1987 in Aba Hamed.

Niger tied its record for hottest day in history on June 22, 2010, when the temperature reached 47.1°C (116.8°F) at Bilma. That record stood for just one day, as Bilma broke the record again on June 23, when the mercury topped out at 48.2°C (118.8°F). The previous record was 47.1°C on May 24, 1998, also at Bilma.

Saudi Arabia had its hottest temperature ever on June 22, 2010, with a reading of 52.0°C (125.6°F) in Jeddah, the second largest city in Saudi Arabia. The previous record was 51.7°C (125.1°F), at Abqaiq, date unknown. The record heat was accompanied by a sandstorm, which caused eight power plants to go offline, resulting in blackouts to several Saudi cities.

Chad had its hottest day in history on June 22, 2010, when the temperature reached 47.6°C (117.7°F) at Faya. The previous record was 47.4°C (117.3°F) at Faya on June 3 and June 9, 1961.

Kuwait recorded its hottest temperature in history on June 15 in Abdaly, according to the Kuwait Met office. The mercury hit 52.6°C (126.7°F). Kuwait's previous all-time hottest temperature was 51.9°C (125.4°F), on July 27,2007, at Abdaly. Temperatures reached 51°C (123.8°F) in the capital of Kuwait City on June 15, 2010.

Iraq had its hottest day in history on June 14, 2010, when the mercury hit 52.0°C (125.6°F) in Basra. Iraq's previous record was 51.7°C (125.1°F) set August 8, 1937, in Ash Shu'aybah.

Pakistan had its hottest temperature in history on May 26, when the mercury hit an astonishing 53.5°C (128.3°F) at the town of MohenjuDaro, according to the Pakistani Meteorological Department. While this temperature reading must be reviewed by the World Meteorological Organization (WMO) for authenticity, not only is the 128.3°F reading the hottest temperature ever recorded in Pakistan, it is the hottest reliably measured temperature ever recorded on the continent of Asia.

Myanmar (Burma) had its hottest temperature in its recorded history on May 12, when the mercury hit 47°C (116.6°F) in Myinmu, according to the Myanmar Department of Meteorology and Hydrology. Myanmar's previous hottest temperature was 45.8°C (114.4°F) at Minbu, Magwe division on May 9, 1998. According to Chris Burt, author of the authoritative weather records book Extreme Weather, the 47°C measured this year is the hottest temperature in Southeast Asia history.

Ascention Island (St. Helena, a U.K. Territory) had its hottest temperature in history on March 25, 2010, when the mercury hit 34.9°C (94.8°C) at Georgetown. The previous record was 34.0°C (93.2°F) at Georgetown in April 2003, exact day unknown.

The Solomon Islands had their hottest temperature in history on February 1, 2010, when the mercury hit 36.1°C (97°F) at Lata Nendo (Ndeni). The previous record for Solomon Islands was 35.6°C (96.0°F) at Honaiara, date unknown.

Columbia had its hottest temperature in history on January 24, 2010, when Puerto Salgar hit 42.3°C (108°F). The previous record was 42.0°C (107.6°F) at El Salto in March 1988 (exact day unknown).

90L forms in far eastern Atlantic
NHC has designated an area of thunderstorms in the tropical Atlantic as Invest 90L (8.5 N, 30.0 W). Microwave remote sensing suggests there are some decent thunderstorms in 90L, as peak rain rates were around 1 - 2 inches per hour. According to CIMMS wind-shear analyses, 90L is under a moderate 10 - 15 knots of wind shear, and upper level winds over the disturbance are diverging, which creates a vacuum effect that will enhance updrafts and thunderstorm growth. The disturbance is tracking into a broad area of weak shear to the west and northwest. The steering currents for 90L are to the west-northwest, which will move it into this area of weaker shear. The disturbance is at 8°N latitude, which is too close to the Equator to leverage the Earth's spin very well to spin up. As 90L's west-northwest motion carries it farther from the Equator, the additional spin the disturbance gains from the Earth's rotation will aid development, particularly once 90L gets north of 10°N latitude.The Saharan Air Layer with its dust and dry air lurks just to the north of 90L, but the SHIPS model predicts 90L will remain far enough from the dry air over the next five days so that it will not interfere with development.


Figure 2. IR Satellite Composite of 90L taken at 5:40 pm EDT.


Figure 3. Saharan Air Layer analysis courtesy of the University of Wisconsin CIMSS group.

Model Forecasts and Climatology
The latest 2pm EDT (18Z) runs of the GFDL and HWRF models show 90L developing into a hurricane 3 - 5 days from now. These models suggest that 90L will pass well northeast of the Lesser Antilles Islands. The 18Z GFS model develops 90L into a tropical storm about 7 days from now, and forecasts a track through the northern Lesser Antilles Islands 7 - 8 days from now. The 18Z NOGAPS and 12Z ECMWF models show little development of 90L. The GFDL and HWRF models are too aggressive developing 90L, and likely show too much of a northward motion due to excessive depth of the system they portray. The GFS solution, showing a more delayed development and possible threat to the Lesser Antilles Islands is probably more reasonable. Looking at climatology based on research done by Dr. Bob Hart at Florida State University,, 90L has a 36% chance of developing into a tropical cyclone by 2pm Saturday. NHC is putting these odds at 20%. Dr. Hart also has an experimental product showing that historically, about 30% of all tropical cyclones at 90L's current position eventually hit land as a hurricane. Of course, 90L is not yet a tropical cyclone, but these odds suggest that 90L has the potential to become a dangerous Cape Verdes-type hurricane that will affect land.

Next update
I'll have an update by 8pm Friday.

Jeff Masters (with lots of help from Rob Carver on the 90L portion of the post!)
Categories: Heat
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2003. Snowlover123 08:05 PM GMT del 30 Luglio 2010    
Quoting JFLORIDA:


Perhaps because it acutually has to do with the definition of climate. You think? It is probably the most basic aspect of meteorological studies.


Your rants are becoming more and more illogical with every comment you post.
Member Since: Aprile 1, 2010 Posts: 9 Comments: 2513
2004. HurricaneKyle 08:05 PM GMT del 30 Luglio 2010    
1991. reported.
Member Since: Agosto 10, 2009 Posts: 3 Comments: 672
2005. LoneStarWeather 08:07 PM GMT del 30 Luglio 2010    
Quoting JFLORIDA:


Thats kinda unfair when he went to great effort in this blog to point out it was trends in extremes that made this remarkable.

Would you like a little cheese to go with that whine?
Member Since: Settembre 8, 2001 Posts: 0 Comments: 391
2006. flsurfer305 08:07 PM GMT del 30 Luglio 2010    
Quoting Levi32:


Thank you :)
your video blog is awesome look foward to it everyday
Member Since: Maggio 25, 2010 Posts: 0 Comments: 35
2007. xcool 08:08 PM GMT del 30 Luglio 2010    
Member Since: Settembre 26, 2009 Posts: 2 Comments: 15503
2008. extreme236 08:08 PM GMT del 30 Luglio 2010    
Quoting HurricaneKyle:
1991. reported.


The comment was removed...will probably be back under another alias soon enough.
Member Since: Agosto 2, 2007 Posts: 19 Comments: 19234
2009. Levi32 08:08 PM GMT del 30 Luglio 2010    
I see the 12z Euro has nothing again....strange how the 12z runs are always the ones not developing it and then the 0z runs do. Again....the upper pattern forecasted by the ECMWF was drastically different from the preceding run....it is really struggling with the pattern right now. All this flip-flopping and confusion means we can't trust the computers near as much (we never really should anyway!) and will have to rely on common-sense forecasting for the moment.
Member Since: novembre 24, 2005 Posts: 586 Comments: 25459
2011. LoneStarWeather 08:09 PM GMT del 30 Luglio 2010    
Quoting MiamiHurricanes09:
LOL! No I am not planning on getting a ferret nor a pet named Peter. LOL. It's just something I made up...FLdewey also has Vorticity the cat and Climatology the dog.

This conversation reminds me of the "sleep over" scene in Big...
Member Since: Settembre 8, 2001 Posts: 0 Comments: 391
2012. NRAamy 08:09 PM GMT del 30 Luglio 2010    
Neap.....yes, I am right on the coast..and the fog comes in almost every night....cool to cold ocean breezes...dude, I'm wearing sweats in the summer! That is just wrong....
Member Since: Gennaio 24, 2007 Posts: 315 Comments: 31937
2013. Levi32 08:09 PM GMT del 30 Luglio 2010    
Quoting flsurfer305:
your video blog is awesome look foward to it everyday


I'm glad you enjoy it =)
Member Since: novembre 24, 2005 Posts: 586 Comments: 25459
2015. PRweathercenter 08:10 PM GMT del 30 Luglio 2010    
When will we see invest 91?
Member Since: Luglio 21, 2010 Posts: 58 Comments: 916
2016. clwstmchasr 08:12 PM GMT del 30 Luglio 2010    
Quoting xcool:


What is the 850mb vort in the GOM? There is nothing out there.
Member Since: Luglio 29, 2006 Posts: 0 Comments: 2758
2018. CybrTeddy 08:13 PM GMT del 30 Luglio 2010    
Back.


Quoting
extreme236:



The comment was removed...will probably be back under another alias soon enough.


Just like the last 5 years. I see the 12z Euro has once again dropped 90L. Its having trouble with as mentioned by Levi with the upper patterns and with that tropical wave behind 90L that should merge. There is no reason why 90L shouldn't develop further if it gets going.
Member Since: Luglio 8, 2005 Posts: 253 Comments: 20259
2019. Snowlover123 08:13 PM GMT del 30 Luglio 2010    
Quoting StSimonsIslandGAGuy:


I see.


He's saying that every weather event is climate. No no no. There's a clear difference between individual weather events, and climate change.
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2020. TexasHurricane 08:13 PM GMT del 30 Luglio 2010    
Looks like there would be more than one area to watch here....but, then what do I know.

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2021. CybrTeddy 08:14 PM GMT del 30 Luglio 2010    
Afternoon StSimons.
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2022. NoNamePub 08:14 PM GMT del 30 Luglio 2010    
Quoting hurrkat05:
well i will just sit back and take it all in and watch all you guys go down on storms ship...i will be back aug 2nd with my weekly post ...you gentleman have a nice and pleasant day....before i leave check all the dry air all over the atlantic and also the northerly shear coming off of s america....so if anything tries to go through the islands that if they survive the dry air they are going wosh....good day storm w...


To Quote Willy Wonka -
" I SAID GOOD DAY SIR"


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2023. PanhandleChuck 08:14 PM GMT del 30 Luglio 2010    
Later all, gotta work most of the weekend, will probably be able to come back Sunday, I figure we'll have a tropical depression or a storm to track by then... Good Day All
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2024. xcool 08:15 PM GMT del 30 Luglio 2010    
clwstmchasr .nothing in gom
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2026. Levi32 08:15 PM GMT del 30 Luglio 2010    
Quoting TexasHurricane:
Looks like there would be more than one area to watch here....but, then what do I know.



The Caribbean does have to be watched. A decent amount of heat is getting jammed in there over the next week or so.
Member Since: novembre 24, 2005 Posts: 586 Comments: 25459
2028. CybrTeddy 08:16 PM GMT del 30 Luglio 2010    
I see our local stormtop's back. Don't quote him, he does this stuff on purpose. Obviously, he is not the brightest guy on Earth.
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2032. CybrTeddy 08:18 PM GMT del 30 Luglio 2010    
Decent area of convection off the US coast.

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2034. stormhank 08:20 PM GMT del 30 Luglio 2010    
thanks miami09 for that chart,,,does anyone know what 900 mb is = to in feet?? im thinking 1000 feet but im not sure
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2035. Ossqss 08:21 PM GMT del 30 Luglio 2010    
Seems the climate models still don't account for clouds or cloud formation very well to date. Perhaps one day we will be able to successfully understand that variable much better. Kinda reminds me of the surprise we got recently with the ozone hole closing and its unforeseen impacts on the planet.

I was just checking this paper out, pretty interesting anyhow. Back to work - L8R :(

http://www.atmos-chem-phys.net/10/5449/2010/acp-10-5449-2010.pdf
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2036. CybrTeddy 08:22 PM GMT del 30 Luglio 2010    
On 90L, this process is going to take a while gang. The ECMWF will eventually lock on to this, although its a curious pattern of 00z developing a hurricane stronger each 00z and the 12z keeps on showing no development at all. I think the 12z doesn't have as good a handle on this as the 00z.
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2037. LADobeLady 08:23 PM GMT del 30 Luglio 2010    
Quoting CybrTeddy:
I see our local stormtop's back. Don't quote him, he does this stuff on purpose. Obviously, he is not the brightest guy on Earth.


I hope you wrote that in stone?
Member Since: Luglio 29, 2005 Posts: 21 Comments: 794
2038. wayfaringstranger 08:23 PM GMT del 30 Luglio 2010    
Quoting StormW:
Quoting hurrkat05:
well i will just sit back and take it all in and watch all you guys go down on storms ship...i will be back aug 2nd with my weekly post ...you gentleman have a nice and pleasant day....before i leave check all the dry air all over the atlantic and also the northerly shear coming off of s america....so if anything tries to go through the islands that if they survive the dry air they are going wosh....good day storm w...




Wow, maybe hurkat is having a rough day?

Take a deep breath in, now out, in, now out. Now go to your happy place.
Member Since: Luglio 12, 2010 Posts: 0 Comments: 235
2039. homelesswanderer 08:24 PM GMT del 30 Luglio 2010    
Quoting Levi32:
I see the 12z Euro has nothing again....strange how the 12z runs are always the ones not developing it and then the 0z runs do. Again....the upper pattern forecasted by the ECMWF was drastically different from the preceding run....it is really struggling with the pattern right now. All this flip-flopping and confusion means we can't trust the computers near as much (we never really should anyway!) and will have to rely on common-sense forecasting for the moment.


Ah. The ever-refreshing optimism of youth. Lol. j/k. Afternoon Levi. :)
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2042. Snowlover123 08:24 PM GMT del 30 Luglio 2010    
Quoting StSimonsIslandGAGuy:


That's not what he's saying.


Then what is he saying?
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2043. wayfaringstranger 08:25 PM GMT del 30 Luglio 2010    
gfs and gfdl had some interesting runs....
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2044. reid221 08:26 PM GMT del 30 Luglio 2010    
Quoting stormhank:
thanks miami09 for that chart,,,does anyone know what 900 mb is = to in feet?? im thinking 1000 feet but im not sure

Pressure Altitude in Metric Units

Height Temperature Pressure
(Meters) (Deg. C) (Millibars-mb)
0000 15.0 1013
1000 8.5 900
2000 2.0 800
3000 -4.5 700
4000 -11.0 620
5000 -17.5 540
6000 -24.0 470
7000 -30.5 410
8000 -37.0 360
9000 -43.5 310
10000 -50.0 260
11000 -56.5 230
12000 -56.5 190
13000 -56.5 170
14000 -56.5 140
15000 -56.5 120
16000 -56.5 100
17000 -56.5 90
18000 -56.5 75
19000 -56.5 65
20000 -56.5 55
21000 -55.5 47
22000 -54.5 40
23000 -53.5 34
24000 -52.5 29
25000 -51.5 25
26000 -50.5 22
27000 -49.5 18
28000 -48.5 16
29000 -47.5 14
30000 -46.5 12
31000 -45.5 10
32000 -44.5 8.7
33000 -41.7 7.5
34000 -38.9 6.5
35000 -36.1 5.6

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2046. clwstmchasr 08:26 PM GMT del 30 Luglio 2010    
Quoting xcool:
clwstmchasr .nothing in gom


That is what I thought. The 850mb vort had me a bit confused.
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2048. CybrTeddy 08:27 PM GMT del 30 Luglio 2010    
Very large, impressive tropical wave off Africa, probably the best all season. I wouldn't be too shocked to see no merge whatsoever and this becoming a tropical cyclone.

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2050. wayfaringstranger 08:27 PM GMT del 30 Luglio 2010    
Why would you ever hope that a system hits Florida or anywhere in the US?
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2051. PensacolaDoug 08:27 PM GMT del 30 Luglio 2010    
An observation.

This lifted from post 1935 By JFLORDIA:

The insult was yours my friend.


But on post 1886:

He writes:

Political posters hope to silence all discussion on a weather site - thats just not going to happen. Many of you are from rural areas and certainly have strong political opinions on the economic implications of climate change.
Thats not science and this is a science related site.


Question: Am I the only one who sees the insult in that post?

If ya don't, re-read the second sentence.

And if anybody thinks JFLORIDA ought to read this. It may need to be re-posted as I'm sure he has me blocked.

Thanks all.

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About JeffMasters
Jeff co-founded the Weather Underground in 1995 while working on his Ph.D. He flew with the NOAA Hurricane Hunters from 1986-1990.

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