'Rope' cloud with a 'Southerly buster' Cliff Revell
Satellite pictures on the afternoon of the 21st October 2007 showed a well-defined 'rope' cloud, a long narrow line of cumulus, marking the leading edge of a frontal cloudband over the Southern Ocean. (Fig.1) This feature retained its identity over the next 24 to 36 hours and on the morning of the 22nd extended southeastward from about Cape Turnagain, having moved at an average speed of 40kt. The cloud band as a whole had become distorted by the landmass of
Cloud lines of this type were first identified in satellite pictures in the late 1960s. An example was described by Seitter and Muench 1985.
Fig.1 Visible picture from satellite MTSAT at 1400NZST 21 October 2007.

Fig. 2 Visible picture from satellite MTSAT at 0900 NZST 22 October 2007.

Fig. 3 Visible picture from satellite MTSATat 1400NZST on 22 October 2007.
During its passage along the east coast the cloud system was accompanied by a 'southerly buster', a rapid change to a strong southerly wind and associated large rise in barometric pressure. Southerly buster events were intensively studied during SOUCHEX in the late 1980s (Smith et al 1991, Ridley 1990). They found evidence that the occurrence and movement of southerly changes along the east coast are controlled largely by synoptic-scale processes through changes in the upper-level winds as a trough approaches in the mean westerly flow. Most, though not all, are associated with a cold front that originates over the
This event is represented in Fig.4, a time section from Invercargill to
From the coarse sampling of observations available it is not possible to determine the precise relationships among the various features involved but in this instance the rope cloud appears to have been closely associated with the surface wind-shift and pressure-jump line, the surface cold front. The nature and behaviour of surface cold fronts continues to be a subject of study, e.g. Schultz 2005.
Fig. 4 Time cross section from Invercargill (NV) to
NR – Napier
CT – Castlepoint
NG – Ngawi
CC –
KI – Kainkoura
LB – Le Bons Bay
TU – Timaru
DN –
References:
Smith, R. K., R.N. Ridley, M.A. Page, J. T. Steiner, and A.P.Sturman,1991: Southerly Changes on the East Coast of
Ridley, R.N., 1990: Southerly buster events in
Schultz, D. M., 2005: A review of cold fronts with Prefrontal T roughs and Wind Shifts. Monthly Weather Review 133, 8, 2449-2472.
Seitter, K.L. and H.S. Muench, 1985: Observation of a Cold Front With Rope Cloud. Monthly Weather Review 113, 5, 840-848.