How Do the Santa Ana Winds Work? - podcast episode cover

How Do the Santa Ana Winds Work?

Jun 10, 20227 min
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Episode description

The Santa Anas are winds that sweep hot air over Southern California, both clearing the air and exacerbating wildfires. Learn how they work in this episode of BrainStuff, based on this article: https://science.howstuffworks.com/nature/climate-weather/atmospheric/santa-ana-winds.htm

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Transcript

Speaker 1

Welcome to brain Stuff, a production of iHeart Radio. Hey brain Stuff, Lauren Vogelbaum. Here, when the Santa Ana winds blow in southern California, everyone takes notice, too many in the region, writers, singers, poets, and everyone else. They're a harbinger, mostly of no good. Scientifically speaking, the Santa Anna's are something else, entirely a perennial natural phenomenon whose future effects

are now warped by a warming planet. Climate scientist Alexander Gershnov with the scripts Institution of Oceanography at UC San Diego told the university's news service in early nineteen climate change has been projected to lengthen the dry season in California and other Mediterranean climate regions, making vegetation more likely

to remain dry into December. These changes, together with the projected lessening of least season Santa Ana winds, suggest that southern California's wildfire season could shift toward winter, longer, more dangerous dry seasons, wildfires raging later in the year, changes in the winds. It's potentially dramatic stuff. It might seem the stuff of Hollywood, but let's back up a step. Santa Ana winds are dry and warm winds from the Great Basin, an area that incorporates large parts of the

states of Nevada and Utah. The winds start in the basins inland deserts east and north of southern California, and then flow downward, taking a turn toward the Pacific Ocean. The Santa Anna's are usually, but not always, late year winds that form when the weather is cooler in the Great Basin. They don't begin in hot deserts. They actually start off as cool winds and are pushed towards southern

California by high pressure systems. But as the wind's head down slope, they get both warmer because air generally heats up as it descends, and drier air only a mile above your head right now maybe some thirty degrees fahrenheit warmer than the air around you. In metric that's the difference, say between twenty one degrees celsius where you are and thirty eight some six up. It doesn't take much of

an altitude change to make a difference. Because of this and a number of other circumstances, the Santa Annas have a reputation. These winds most often whip into southern California during the driest part of the year, providing a metaphoric bit of gasoline to the already fire ready tinder in the area. For example, in December of the Santa Anna's fueled the largest fire in southern California's history, the Thomas Fire, which burned four hundred and forty square miles that's eleven

thousand square kilometers Inventor and Santa Barbara Counties. The winds also fanned the flames of the October two thousand seven and two thousand three wildfires, and all of these have caused serious damage to property and the people in wild life that lived there from the fires themselves, but also

from smoke. According to a paper published in the journal Geophysical Research Letters in the frequency of Santa ana wind events is actually decreasing and may drop by an average of eighteen percent by the end of the twenty first century. This is largely because the Great Basin will have fewer days of the cold weather that's necessary to form the winds. Though that may sound like good news, it's not. The Santa Anna's will still have a busy period as they do now, and it will come in the peak of

a later possibly longer wildfire season. That peak will shift from October into November and the early winter months, which could lead to bigger wildfires that burn longer. As a weather phenomenon that's unique to southern California, the Santa Anna's have long been associated with a certain feel. Novelist Raymond Chandler, a long time so Cal resident famed for detective stories like The Big Sleep, described a windy Santa Anna knight in his short story Red Wind. Quote. On nights like that,

every booze party ends in a fight. Meek little wives feel the edge of the carving knife and study their husband's necks. Anything can happen. You can even get a full glass of beer at a cocktail lounge. On the other hand, Santa Anna's can sweep out impurities in the air, provide welcome warmth, and offer bright blue skies and stunning sunsets in the winter. The Beach Boys took this more upbeat look at the winds and their song Santa Ana Winds, fill my sails a desert wind and hold the waves

high for me. Then I will come and test my skill where the Santa Ana winds blow free. Still, too many residents in the area the Santa Annas have an ominous feel to them. Essayist Joan Didion wrote in her essay The Santa Anna's, published as part of Los Angeles Notebook and Slouching towards Bethlehem in I have neither heard nor read that a Santa Anna is due, but I know it, and almost everyone I've seen today knows it too.

We know it because we feel it. The baby frets, the maide sulks, I rekindle a waning argument with the telephone company, then cut my losses and lie down, given over to whatever it is in the air. To live with the Santa Anna is to accept, consciously or unconsciously, a deeply mechanistic view of human behavior. Whatever lies in store for the Santa Annas and all they reap is still a matter for the future. But for now, the warm, dry i winds continue to blow the citizens of southern California.

You can feel it. Today's episode is based on the article what are the sent to Anna Winds? On House to forwarks dot com, written by John Donovan. Brainstuff is production of by Heart Radio in partnership with how s toff works dot Com, and it's produced by Tyler playing four more podcasts from my heart Radio. This is the I heart Radio app, Apple podcasts, or wherever you listen to your favorite shows.

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