When a shortwave trough moves eastward over the Rocky Mountains and into the central United States, the following important features may form: a drytrough (i.e., a lee trough that also has the characteristics of a dryline), an arctic front, a low-level jet, and two synoptic-scale rainbands (called the cold front aloft rainband and the pre-drytrough rainband) that can produce heavy precipitation and severe weather well ahead of the drytrough. These features are incorporated into a new conceptual model for cyclones in the central United States. Use of this model can aid the interpretation of observational data and numerical model output, and it may also help to improve short-range forecasting in the central United States.
Introductory remarksDespite the fact that the Norwegian Cyclone Model was based on maritime cyclones making landfall in northwestern Europe (Bjerknes and Solberg 1922), it has been applied essentially unchanged to cyclones in the central United States for 70 years (Friedman 1989;Mass 1991). This is not without some justification, since one of the main features of the Norwegian model are fronts demarcating airmasses, which are also a characteristic of cyclones in the central United States. However, in view of the unique geography of the central United States, it would not be surprising if cyclones in this region displayed structural differences from those in Europe.In this paper we present a new conceptual model for the structure and evolution of cyclones in the cen- Locatelli et al. (1989Locatelli et al. ( , 1995, Martin et al. (1990Martin et al. ( , 1995, Hobbs et al. (1990), andWang et al. (1995), as well as on regular observations of cyclones in the central United States. It is important to note that we are not proposing that all cyclones that form in the lee of the Rocky Mountains are described by our model. However, many cyclones that form in the winter, spring, and even into early summer, in the lee of the Rockies, and move eastward into the central United States, appear to be described better by the conceptual model presented here than by the Norwegian model. Our conceptual model highlights a number of important nonclassic features associated with cyclones in the central United States, some of which have been known for many years. These include lee troughs