Title: Upcoming Schedule
1Upcoming Schedule
- The near future
- Apr 14 Lecture on El Nino and Tropical Cyclones
(you wont want to miss that) - Apr 21 Global Warming
- April 28 PGE and Cal Severe Weather
- May 5 Papers Due and ½ Presentations
- May 12 ½ Presentations
- May 19 Final (at regular class time)
-
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4Overview
- Tornadoes are violently rotating columns of air
that extend from a thunderstorm colud to the
ground - Funnel clouds are tornadoes that dont touch the
ground - Primarily develop in supercells, but can develop
in squall line and in hurricanes - Range in width from 150 ft to ½ mile
- 75 of worldwide tornadoes occur in the US (any
guess why???)
5 Supercell Thunderstorms
- Consist of a single cell instead of a series of
cells - Diameter 12-30 miles
- Smaller than MCS and frontal squall lines
- More violent (tornadoes can be produced)
- Short life span (2-3 hours)
- Always rotate
6Supercell Formation Four Ingredients
- Extremely unstable environment
- Humid and warm at the surface
- Cool and dry aloft
- Very moist air in lower troposphere
- Moderate to strong vertical wind speed shear
- A trigger mechanism (frontal lifting)
7SupercellsRotating Thunderstorms
8Stability Index and Supercells
- CAPE (Convective Available Potential Energy) is a
favored supercell index - Measures the area where the parcels temperature
exceeds the environmental temperature - CAPE is proportional to the maximum updraft speed
of an unstable parcel - CAPE between 500-1500 thunderstorm
- CAPE between 1500-3000 supercells with hail and
tornadoes
9Supercell Cross-section
10Super Cell Note Cloud Rotation
11Super Cell
12Tornado Frequency, 1998
13When and Where
- Any time of year
- Most common east of the Rockies during spring and
summer - Southern States March through May
- Northern States Late spring and summer
- Mainly generated from supercell tstorms
- 1 in 1000 storms are supercells
- 1 in 5 supercells produces a tornado
14California Tornadoes
15Tornado Stages (pg 317)
- Dust swirl stage Rotation makes contact with
ground (A, B) - Organizing stage Funnel cloud, already on the
ground, increases in intensity and size (C) - Mature stage Intensity peaks, size peaks,
structure nearly vertical (D) - Shrinking stage Vortex tilts and takes on a
rope-like appearance (E) - Decay stage Rope-like structure increases and
tornado dissipates (F)
16Supercell Tornadoes
- Rotation, tilting and stretching processes are key
17What Causes the Stretching?
- Downdrafts from the forward and rear flank of the
supercell meet underneath the cell - When this happens, the low level part of the
updraft circulation is cut off from the warm air
souce - The less buoyant low level air rises more slowly
than the warm updraft above it - This stretches out the air column and the low
level rotation increases dramatically - Known as vortex stretching
18Other Supercell Tornado Facts
- Tornadoes can stay on the ground from a few
minutes to an hour - More than one tornado may be on the ground at the
same time - Tornadogenesis may occur several times during the
life of a supercell
19Tornado Classification
- Fujita Scale Ranking from F0 (weakest) to F5
(strongest). - Damage from tornadoes is used to estimate wind
speed (very few wind measurements inside
tornadoes) - F4 and F5 tornadoes are strong enough to pick up
and throw an automobile
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21Fujita Scale Tornado Statistics
22US Tornado Distribution
Tornado Alley
23Tornado WindsHow Do They Get So Strong???
- Law of Conservation of Angular Momentum
- Conservation means in the absence of other
forces energy in a system remains the same - For angular momentum the system is made up of
the radius (r) of the system and the rotational
velocity (v) of the wall - For the Law to be upheld, any product of rv
equals the same value r1v1r2v2r3v3 - Therefore, if the radius gets smaller the
velocity must increase (visualize an ice skater
spinning and pulling her arms in and spinning
faster
24Tornado WindsHow Do They Get So Strong???
r4000 m v2.5 m/s
r1000 m v10 m/s
r100 m v100 m/s
At mesocyclone scale r x v10000 At wall
cloud scale r x v10000 At tornado
scale r x v10000 100 m/sec _at_
200 kt _at_ 230 mph
25Non-Supercell Tornadoes
- Landspouts
- Waterspouts
- Landfall hurricane generated
26Landspouts
- Short lived and not as intense as supercell
tornadoes - Called landspouts because they are visually
similar to waterspouts - Not due to storm cell rotation like supercells
- These vortices develop when a strong updraft
stretches into a tight circulation. - In California strong cold air advection aloft
causes strong enough instability to create strong
updrafts - Nearly all wintertime California tornadoes are
landspouts (F1 scale usually)
27Waterspouts
- Weak tornadoes commonly observed off coastlines
- Formation mechanism not well understood
28Other Atmospheric Vortices
- Gustnadoes Short-lived and weak, develop in
strong shear flow along some thunderstorm gust
fronts - Cold air funnels Vortices that emerge from the
base of elevated convective clouds, usually when
very cold air moves into the upper troposphere - Dust devils Dry convection over hot surfaces,
sometimes over 1km in depth
29Tornado Detection
- Storm spotters and Doppler radar are primary
tools (see pg 333, 334) - Storm spotters include volunteers, police and
other emergency management personnel who report
tornado activity to the National Weather Service - Doppler radar is superior to ordinary radar
because it can detect rotational wind patterns
30Doppler Radar and Tornado Detection
- Doppler radar can measure the component of the
wind moving toward and away from the radar - Strong rotational winds (20-40 kts) often precede
tornadogenesis - When this type of circulation develops it is
called a mesocyclone signature (Fig 18-21B) - Forecasters track and extrapolate progress to
determine its path
31Tornado Forecasting
- Forecasters generally assess the general
likelihood for tornado activity using stability
indices (CAPE) calculated from RAOB measurements
(12 hr- 3 day advance window) CAPE gt 2500,gt4000 - Forecasters then assess cloud development,
monitor radar (look for supercell development,
bow echoes, hook echoes) and may issue watches
(several hours advance windows) - Forecaster monitor spotter information and
Doppler radar to issue warnings (few minutes to a
few hours advance window)
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34Ultimate chase
35http//www.stormvideo.com/tornado.html
36A New cloud type Politically Incorrect Cumulus
37Politically Incorrect Cumulus