Title: Tornadogenesis within a Simulated Supercell Storm
1Tornadogenesis within a Simulated Supercell
Storm
- Ming Xue
- School of Meteorology and
- Center for Analysis and Prediction of Storms
- University of Oklahoma
- mxue_at_ou.edu
- Acknowledgement NSF, FAA and PSC
22nd Severe Local Storms Conference 6 October 2004
2Why Numerical Simulations?
- Observational data lack necessary temporal and
spatial resolutions and coverage - Observed variables limit to very few
- VORTEX II trying to change all these (?)
3Theory of Mid-level Rotation- responsible for
mid-level mesocyclone
4Tilting of Storm-relative Streamwise
Environmental Vorticity into Vertical
5Theories of Low-level Rotation
6Baroclinic Generation of Horizontal Vorticity
Along Gust Front Tilted into Vertical and
Stretched (Klemp and Rotunno 1983)
7Downward Transport of Mid-level Mesocyclone
Angular Momentum by Rainy Downdraft (Davis-Jones
2001, 2002)
vorticity carried by downdraft parcel
baroclinic generation around cold, water loaded
downdraft
cross-stream vort. generation by sfc friction
8Past Simulation Studies
- Representative work by several groups
- Klemp and Rotunno (1983), Rotunno and Klemp
(1985) - Wicker and Wilhelmson (1995)
- Grasso and Cotton (1995)
- Adlerman, Droegemeier, and Davies-Jones (1999)
- All used locally refined grids
9Current Simulation Study
- Single uniform resolution grid (50x50km)
covering the entire system of supercell storms - Up to 25 m horizontal and 20 m vertical
resolution - Most intense tornado ever simulated (Vgt120m/s)
within a realistic convective storm - Entire life cycle of tornado captured
- Internal structure as well as indications of
suction vortices obtained
1025 m (LES) simulation
- Using ARPS model
- 1977 Del City, OK sounding (3300 J/kg CAPE)
- 2000 x 2000 x 83 grid points
- dx 50m and 25m, dzmin 20m, dt0.125s.
- Warmrain microphysics with surface friction
- Simulations up to 5 hours
- Using 2048 Alpha Processors at Pittsburgh
Supercomputing Center - 15TB of 16-bit compressed data generated by one
25m simulation over 30 minutes, output at 1 s
intervals
11Sounding for May 20, 1977 Del City, Oklahoma
tornadic supercell storm
CAPE3300 J/kg
12Storm-relative Hodograph
1350m simulation shown in full 50x50 km domain
14Full Domain Surface Fields of 50m simulation
t3h 44m Red positive vertical vorticity
15 25 m simulation surface fields shown in
subdomains
16Near surface vorticity, wind, reflectivity, and
temperature perturbation
2 x 2 km
Vort 2 s-1
17Low-level reflectivity and streamlines of 25 m
simulation
1850m Movie(30min 4h 30min)
1925m Movie(over 20 min)
20Maximum surface wind speed and minimum
perturbation pressure of 25m simulation
120m/s
gt80mb pressure drop
50m/s in 1min
120m/s max surface winds
-80mb
time
21Pressure time series in vicinity of Allison TX
F-4 Tornado on 8 June 1995 (Winn et al 1999)
910mb
gt50mb pressure drop
850mb
22Lee etc (2004) 22nd SLS Conf. CDROM 15.3 100mb
pressure drop
23Iso-surfaces of cloud water (qc 0.3 g kg-1,
gray) and vertical vorticity (z0.25 s-1, red),
and streamlines (orange) at about 2 km level of a
50m simulation
24Time-dependent Trajectories
253km
t13250s beginning of vortex intensification
View from South
263km
t13250s beginning of vortex intensification
N
View from SW
27Trajectory Animations
283km
View from Northeast
29(No Transcript)
30Brownings Conceptual Model of Supercell Storm
31Diagnostics along Trajectories
32Orange portion t13250-500s 13250200s
14km
t13250s Beginning of low-level spinup
338km
X Y Z
W Vh
Streamwise Vort. Cross-stream Vort. Horizontal
Vort.
Vertical Vort. Total Vort.
13450
13250
12750
342 m s-2
Force along trajectory
5
Buoyancy Vert. Pgrad Sum of the two
b' due to -p'
-5
Perturbation pressure
-76mb
13250
35Orange portion t13250-500s 13250200s
14km
rapid parcel rise
t13250s Beginning of low-level spinup
368km
X Y Z
W Vh
Streamwise Vort. Cross-stream Vort. Horizontal
Vort.
Vertical Vort. Total Vort.
13450
13250
12750
373 m s-2
Force along trajectory
Buoyancy Vert. Pgrad Sum of the two
5
-5
Perturbation pressure
-76mb
13250
38Conclusions
- F5 intensity tornado formed behind the gust
front, within the cold pool. - Air parcels feeding the tornado all originated
from the warm sector in a layer of about 2 km
deep. - The low-level parcels pass over the forward-flank
gust front of 1st or 2nd supercell, descended to
ground level and flowed along the ground inside
the cold pool towards the convergence center - The parcels gain streamwise vorticity through
stretching and baroclinic vorticity generation
(quantitative calculations to be completed)
before turning sharply into the vertical
39Conclusions
- Intensification of mid-level mesocyclone lowers
mid-level pressure - Vertical PGF draws initially negatively buoyant
low-level air into the tornado vortex but the
buoyancy turns positive as pressure drops - Intense vertical stretching follows ?
intensification of low-level tornado vortex ?
genesis of a tornado
40Conclusions (less certain at this time)
- Baroclinic generation of horizontal vorticity
along gust front does not seem to have played a
key role (in this case at least) - Downward transport of vertical vorticity
associated with mid-level mesocyclone does not
seem to be a key process either (need
confirmation by e.g., vorticity budget
calculations)
41Many Issues Remain
- Exact processes for changes in vorticity
components along trajectories - Treatment and effects of surface friction and SGS
turbulence near the surface - Do many tornadoes form inside cold pool?
- Microphysics, including ice processes
- Intensification and non-intensification of
low-level rotation? - Role of 1st storm in this case
- etc etc etc.
42Movie of Cloud Water Field25 m, 7.5x7.5km
domain, 30 minutes
43Questions / Comments?