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Old March 8th 07, 07:21 PM posted to sci.geo.meteorology
Weatherlawyer Weatherlawyer is offline
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First recorded activity by Weather-Banter: Dec 2004
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Default jetstream gravity waves and turbulence

On Mar 7, 10:35 pm, "danlj" wrote:
An acquaintance recently encountered severe turbulence at about 20,000
feet over eastern North Carolina after flying in westerly cross-winds
of up to 150 kt.

Due to the SW direction of the wind, he believes that this was not
mountain lee wave; I suspect it was related to the jet.

I am a simple rural physician, with good science training but an
unsophisticated knowledge of meterology and no ability to appreciate
the nuance of numerical models.

I would like to learn about how to recognize the potential for such
turbulence and avoid it, using the meteorolgy resources available on
the www. Who may I contact? What could I read?


Someone else has taken this over but it is still worth a visit:
http://www.booty.org.uk/booty.weather/uswfaqfr.htm