Extratropical cyclones form anywhere within the extratropical regions of the Earth (usually between 30° and 60° latitude from the
equator), either through
cyclogenesis or extratropical transition. In a climatology study with two different cyclone algorithms, a total of 49,745–72,931 extratropical cyclones in the
Northern Hemisphere and 71,289–74,229 extratropical cyclones in the
Southern Hemisphere were detected between 1979 and 2018 based on reanalysis data. A study of extratropical cyclones in the Southern Hemisphere shows that between the
30th and
70th parallels, there are an average of 37 cyclones in existence during any 6-hour period. A separate study in the Northern Hemisphere suggests that approximately 234 significant extratropical cyclones form each winter.
Cyclogenesis Extratropical cyclones form along linear bands of temperature/dew point gradient with significant vertical
wind shear, and are thus classified as baroclinic cyclones. Initially,
cyclogenesis, or low pressure formation, occurs along
frontal zones near a favorable quadrant of a maximum in the
upper level jetstream known as a jet streak. The favorable quadrants are usually at the right rear and left front quadrants, where
divergence ensues. The divergence causes air to rush out from the top of the air column. As mass in the column is reduced,
atmospheric pressure at surface level (the weight of the air column) is reduced. The lowered pressure strengthens the cyclone (a low pressure system). The lowered pressure acts to draw in air, creating
convergence in the low-level wind field. Low-level convergence and upper-level divergence imply upward motion within the column, making cyclones cloudy. As the cyclone strengthens, the cold front sweeps towards the
equator and moves around the back of the cyclone. Meanwhile, its associated
warm front progresses more slowly, as the cooler air ahead of the system is
denser, and therefore more difficult to dislodge. Later, the cyclones
occlude as the poleward portion of the cold front overtakes a section of the warm front, forcing a tongue, or
trowal, of warm air aloft. Eventually, the cyclone will become barotropically cold and begin to weaken.
Atmospheric pressure can fall very rapidly when there are strong upper level forces on the system. When pressures fall more than per hour, the process is called explosive cyclogenesis, and the cyclone can be described as a
bomb. These bombs rapidly drop in pressure to below under favorable conditions such as near a natural
temperature gradient like the
Gulf Stream, or at a preferred quadrant of an upper-level jet streak, where upper level divergence is best. The stronger the upper level divergence over the cyclone, the deeper the cyclone can become. Hurricane-force extratropical cyclones are most likely to form in the northern Atlantic and northern Pacific oceans in the months of December and January. On 14 and 15 December 1986, an extratropical cyclone near Iceland deepened to below , which is a pressure equivalent to a
category 5 hurricane. In the
Arctic, the average pressure for cyclones is during the winter, and during the summer.
Extratropical transition in the north Atlantic after completing its transition from a hurricane to an extratropical cyclone
Tropical cyclones often transform into extratropical cyclones at the end of their tropical existence, usually between 30° and 40° latitude, where there is sufficient forcing from upper-level troughs or
shortwaves riding the
Westerlies for the process of extratropical transition to begin. During this process, a cyclone in extratropical transition (known across the eastern North Pacific and North Atlantic oceans as the post-tropical stage), will invariably form or connect with nearby fronts and/or troughs consistent with a baroclinic system. Due to this, the size of the system will usually appear to increase, while the core weakens. However, after transition is complete, the storm may re-strengthen due to baroclinic energy, depending on the environmental conditions surrounding the system. The peak time of
subtropical cyclogenesis (the midpoint of this transition) in the North Atlantic is in the months of September and October, when the difference between the temperature of the air aloft and the
sea surface temperature is the greatest, leading to the greatest potential for instability. On rare occasions, an extratropical cyclone can transform into a tropical cyclone if it reaches an area of ocean with warmer waters and an environment with less vertical wind shear. An example of this happening is in the
1991 Perfect Storm. The process known as "tropical transition" involves the usually slow development of an extratropically cold core vortex into a tropical cyclone. The
Joint Typhoon Warning Center uses the extratropical transition (XT) technique to subjectively estimate the intensity of tropical cyclones becoming extratropical based on visible and infrared
satellite imagery. Loss of central convection in transitioning tropical cyclones can cause the
Dvorak technique to fail; the loss of convection results in unrealistically low estimates using the Dvorak technique. The system combines aspects of the Dvorak technique, used for estimating tropical cyclone intensity, and the Hebert-Poteat technique, used for estimating
subtropical cyclone intensity. The technique is applied when a tropical cyclone interacts with a
frontal boundary or loses its central convection while maintaining its forward speed or accelerating. The XT scale corresponds to the Dvorak scale and is applied in the same way, except that "XT" is used instead of "T" to indicate that the system is undergoing extratropical transition. Also, the XT technique is only used once extratropical transition begins; the Dvorak technique is still used if the system begins dissipating without transition. Once the cyclone has completed transition and become
cold-core, the technique is no longer used. ==Structure==