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Synoptic Analysis and Weather Maps

Before a forecast can be made, the scattered numbers from thousands of stations and soundings must be drawn together into a coherent picture, the weather map that reveals where the highs, lows, and fronts lie.

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Definition

Synoptic analysis is the process of assembling simultaneous surface and upper-air observations into maps, using conventions such as the station model and isopleth analysis, to diagnose the current structure and features of the atmosphere.

Scope

This topic covers the practice of synoptic analysis: plotting observations with the station model, drawing and interpreting isobars, isotherms, and other isopleths, locating fronts and pressure centers on surface charts, and analyzing upper-air charts to depict the three-dimensional state of the atmosphere.

Core questions

  • How are individual weather observations encoded and plotted on a chart?
  • How are isobars, isotherms, and fronts drawn from scattered data?
  • How do surface and upper-air charts together depict the atmosphere?
  • How does analysis support the interpretation and forecasting of weather systems?

Key theories

The station model
A standardized plotting model packs temperature, dew point, pressure, wind, cloud cover, and weather around each station's location, allowing a forecaster to read regional patterns at a glance.
Isopleth and frontal analysis
Drawing isobars, isotherms, and other isopleths and locating fronts and pressure centers turns discrete observations into continuous fields that reveal the structure and movement of weather systems.

Mechanisms

Observations from surface stations, ships, buoys, aircraft, and radiosondes are encoded and plotted at their locations using the station model. The analyst then draws isopleths, lines of equal pressure, temperature, or height, and identifies fronts, troughs, and pressure centers, producing surface and upper-air charts. Comparing successive maps reveals how systems are moving and changing, the starting point for diagnosis and forecasting.

Clinical relevance

Weather-map analysis remains a core skill in operational forecasting and aviation and marine briefing; even with automated numerical guidance, the analyzed chart provides the shared situational picture from which forecasters reason about a developing weather situation.

History

The first synoptic weather maps were drawn by Brandes in the early nineteenth century once simultaneous observations could be collected; the telegraph made near-real-time mapping possible, and figures such as FitzRoy institutionalized daily charting, while the Bergen School added the frontal analysis conventions still used today.

Key figures

  • Heinrich Wilhelm Brandes
  • Robert FitzRoy
  • Tor Bergeron

Related topics

Seminal works

  • wallace2006
  • carlson1991

Frequently asked questions

What is a station model on a weather map?
A station model is a compact set of symbols and numbers plotted at each observing site that shows the temperature, dew point, pressure, wind direction and speed, cloud cover, and current weather, so a forecaster can read conditions across a region quickly.
Why analyze weather maps by hand when computers make forecasts?
Manual or interactive analysis builds and checks the forecaster's mental picture of the atmosphere, helps catch errors in automated data, and supports reasoning about features and uncertainties that raw model output does not make explicit.

Methods for this concept

Related concepts