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Upper air trough axis orientation and the spatial distribution of rainfall over Israel

✍ Scribed by Abraham Zangvil; Perla Druian


Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
1990
Tongue
English
Weight
413 KB
Volume
10
Category
Article
ISSN
0899-8418

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✦ Synopsis


Abstract

Since Israel is located far from large oceans, availability of moisture may be a limiting factor in producing rainfall by synoptic‐scale disturbances. Thus, moisture evaporating from the nearby Mediterranean Sea may become an important factor in producing precipitation in the region.

A simple scheme has been designed to test the hypothesis that rainfall over Israel is largely affected by the trajectories of air prior to the rain event. The relationship between air trajectories before a rain event and the intensity and spatial distribution of rain over Israel has been examined. We discovered that a large percentage of rain events is associated with maritime air trajectories. Since the Israeli coastline bends sharply towards the west near latitude 31 °N this means that the orientation of synoptic disturbances responsible for precipitation to the north of 31°N and to the south of this latitude are markedly different: troughs in the lower troposphere that are oriented from north‐east to south‐west produce relatively more rain over the south of the country, while troughs that are tilted from north‐west to south‐east or from north to south produce relatively more rainfall over north and central Israel.


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Connection between Eastern Mediterranean
✍ Abraham Zangvil; Svetlana Karas; Anat Sasson 📂 Article 📅 2003 🏛 John Wiley and Sons 🌐 English ⚖ 586 KB

## Abstract This study introduces a new conceptual model to explain the recently observed changes in winter precipitation over Israel. The model is based on our earlier published work (where a connection was reported between the occurrence of major rain days (MRDs) in different parts of the country