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Sundowner winds

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A sundowner is a northerly offshore wind in California along the southern Pacific slope of Santa Ynez Mountains, in communities along the Gaviota Coast and Santa Barbara towards but not including Ventura County.

Formation

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It occurs when a region of high pressure is directly north of the area, the coast of which trends east–west. This contrasts with the more typical onshore flow. The winds blow with greatest force when the pressure gradient is perpendicular to the axis of the Santa Ynez Mountains, which rise directly behind Santa Barbara.[1]

These winds often precede Santa Ana events by a day or two, but also as tail end of Santa Anas after they weaken, it is normal for high-pressure areas to migrate east, causing the pressure gradients to shift to the northeast.[2] Aptly named sundowners are typically nighttime events that terminate after sunrise, they may repeat for days, while Santa Anas are multi-day long events. Weaker sundowner effects may occur without an associated Santa Ana event, at times due to a Diablo wind event (Northern California), akin to a foehn wind.

Fire dangers

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Sundowners are particularly dangerous during wildfire season because the air heats and dries as it descends from the mountains to the sea. Gale force hot, dry winds can make firefighting impossible.[3] A sundowner quickly burned a swath from the mountains through populated areas and across Highway 101 into Hope Ranch during the 1990 Painted Cave Fire.

The most intense periods of the Jesusita Fire's destruction have also been blamed on sundowner winds. The Sherpa Fire grew to 4,000 acres (1,600 ha) overnight due to the sundowner winds, destroying the water system for El Capitán State Beach at the beginning of the 2016 fire season.[4]

Origin

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The etymology of the word sundowner is uncertain, but it may derive from the Spanish term zonda, or from the Arabic simoom, which are both similar wind phenomena.[5] It is also typically the case that sundowner winds commence in the evening near sunset, when onshore sea breezes abate and offshore flows such as the sundowners pick up.

Temperature inversion

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As sundowner events typically happen near nighttime or during nighttime, when coastal temperatures die down, there can be a sharp temperature difference in monitoring stations merely blocks away, due to elevation difference. Higher elevations of hills can correlate with huge temperature rises compared with lower elevations, and can rival those seen in daytime heatwaves --- coastal inversion layer kept beaches (Pacific side of San Francisco) some 40 to 45 degrees fahrenheit cooler than hills at 2500 or 5000 feet (Mount Tamalpais) on afternoon of July 6 2024. Sundowners have caused similarly intense [sharp temperature contrasts] akin to these daytime inversion layers, but surprisingly at close to midnight, where California State Route 192 approximates the hot vs cool dividing line, in the Santa Barbara area.

See also

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References

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  1. ^ Duginski, Paul (2022-03-12). "Why it's been so warm and windy in Southern California this winter". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved 2022-05-10.
  2. ^ Ryan, G., and L. E. Burch, 1992. An analysis of sundowner winds: A California downslope wind event. Preprints, Sixth Conf. on Mountain Meteorology, Portland, Oregon, Amer. Meteor. Soc., 64–67.
  3. ^ "UCSB Scientists to Study Sundowner Winds". edhat, Inc. 15 August 2019. Retrieved 13 January 2020.
  4. ^ Serna, Joseph; Fernandez, Alexia (June 17, 2016). "Santa Barbara County declares state of emergency after wildfire grows to 4,000 acres overnight". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved 17 June 2016.
  5. ^ Pine, Stephen J. (2016). California: A Fire Survey. Tucson: University of Arizona Press. p. 66. ISBN 978-0816532612.










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