%0 Journal Article %T Cold air outbreaks over high-latitude sea gulfs %A H. I. Savij£¿rvi %J Tellus A %D 2012 %I Co-Action Publishing %R 10.3402/tellusa.v64i0.12244 %X Wintertime cold outbreaks were studied via a 2-D numerical model set across an 80 km wide non-frozen sea gulf along 60¡ãN (¡®Gulf of Finland¡¯). In calm conditions, land breezes develop over both coasts with relatively large along-shore wind components. The mid-gulf convergence of the colliding land breezes leads to a moderate rising motion at about 600 m height, forcing bands of low cloud and snowfall along the gulf, whereas the near-surface horizontal wind shear may induce ¡®mini-hurricanes¡¯. A weak large-scale cold outbreak across the gulf distorts the land breeze cells, damping the rising motion, whereas a moderate cross-coast outbreak modifies them into a typical heat island circulation pattern with only a modest rising motion over a flat windward shore. A cold outbreak along the non-frozen gulf leads to strong heat transfer from the sea. This maintains the embedded coastal land breeze circulations that contribute to a double low-level jet structure. The strongest rising motion was obtained for surface winds blowing along the gulf. It is suggested that the Swedish G vle snowstorm of December 1998 was such a case. %K land breeze %K convergence %K heat island circulation %K snow storm %K lake effect %U http://www.tellusa.net/index.php/tellusa/article/view/12244/pdf