Genoa low
[Image:Ligurian Sea map.png|thumb|right|300px|The Ligurian Sea]
A Genoa low is a cyclone that forms or intensifies from a pre-existing cyclone to the south of the Alps over the Gulf of Genoa, Ligurian Sea, Po Valley and northern Adriatic. Vb cyclones are rare events which occur on average only 2.3 times per year.
Cyclogenesis
[Image:Alpenrelief 01.jpg|thumb|right|300px|Relief map of Alpine region of Europe]The northwestern Mediterranean and the Gulf of Genoa in particular, are not only a transition area for passing cyclones, but are frequently areas of cyclogenesis.
Low pressure areas move into or are formed as a result of North Atlantic air entering the Mediterranean Sea between the Alps and the Massif Central, via the Rhone Valley, or via the Carcassonne gap between the Pyrenees and Massif Central. This cold and moist air enters the Mediterranean basin, and is deflected by the high mountains of northwest Corsica, which divert the air mass to the northeast, triggering cool and wet Libeccio winds in response into the Ligurian Sea, which in turn hit the western Apennines located in the immediate vicinity of the sea.
Several factors that have special relevance in the development of depressions south of the Alps are:
- The thermal contrast between land and sea.
- Interaction between the polar front jet stream and the subtropical jet stream.
- Effect of northerly flow over the Alps, enhancing cyclogenetic activity along the southern slopes.
- Effect of the concave curvature of the southern slopes of the Alps, enhancing cyclonic formation.
Effects on climate
The depressions bear rain, often intense, on the Ligurian coast and hills of Tuscany, due to orographic lift which affects the southern side of the Apennines. The area of low pressure is slow moving, and may follow a trajectory from west to east, then going on to affect the regions of the Adriatic, or move from the north-west to south-east down along the Tyrrhenian Sea: in this last case, the structure will reach the same cyclonic area of formation of Tyrrhenian depressions, although not related to the latter.Van Bebber cyclone tracks
Most Genoa lows remain stationary or leave a residual trough to the south of the Alps. Three principal tracks which they typically follow were identified by Wilhelm Jakob van Bebber who classified European windstorm tracks in 1891. To this date, track V of the latter group has remained in common use, unlike the large majority of van Bebber's tracks. The V track is linked to flooding events in central and eastern Europe, low pressure areas can track across France into the Mediterranean Sea where they pick up additional moisture, or form, and then move into central and eastern or southern Europe. the tracks diverge from the Genoa low formation area along the following pathways.Vb track
A strong southwesterly flow in the upper atmosphere leads the lows to the northeast and north-northeast, towards the Vienna Basin. The lows then glide over colder and denser air from the northwest and are lifted orographically by the Bohemian Massif, Ore Mountains, Sudetes, Beskids and Tatra Mountains. The warm and moist air masses cause prolonged and abundant precipitation during slow Meridional flow over the upper catchments of both the southern and northern European Watershed. Flooding then progresses down their major rivers of central Europe. This 'Vb-track' displays a high potential for large summer floods in Europe. Although the link between large summer floods and the Vb track have also been described as having a significant but weak correlation.Examples of flooding events which follow this pattern are:
- St. Mary Magdalene's flood
- 1997 Central European flood from the lows "Xolska" and "Zoe".
- 2002 European floods from the lows "Hanne" and "Ilse".
- 2005 European floods
- 2009 European floods
- 2010 Central European floods from the low "Yolanda".
- 2013 European floods
- 2014 Southeast Europe floods