Title: Twisters
1Twisters
2Review of last lecture
- The general size and lifetime of mesoscale
convective systems, thunderstorms and tornadoes - 3 types of thunderstorms.
- 3 stages of the ordinary thunderstorms. Downdraft
and falling precipitation cut off the updraft. - Formation of multi-cell thunderstorms. Downdrafts
initiate new thunderstorms in nearby regions. - 3 stages of the supercell thunderstorms. Winds
aloft push downdraft/precipitation away and the
updraft is not weakened.
3Video A tornado
- http//www.youtube.com/watch?vxCI1u05KD_s
4Tornadoes
- A rapidly rotating column of air blowing around
intense low pressure with circulation reaching
ground - Wind speeds between 105 km/hr(65mph) and 450
km/hr(280mph) - Rotation is almost exclusively cyclonic a few
spin in the opposite direction - Various sizes most are 100-600 m in diameter
some just a few meters some gt1 mile - Various shapes twisting rope-like funnels to
cylindrical funnels, to massive black funnels - Usually last only a few minutes, but some lasted
several hours - Most move ahead of cold fronts, from SW to NE
some move in other directions - Moving speed is about 30 mph (some gt70 mph)
5Tornado Formation
- Tornadoes can develop in any situation that
produces severe weather cold fronts, mesoscale
convective systems, supercells, and tropical
cyclones. - The processes leading to their formation are not
well understood - The most intense and destructive tornadoes come
from supercells.
63 Stages of Supercell Tornado Formation
- Before thunderstorms develop, a change in wind
direction and an increase in wind speed with
increasing height creates an invisible,
horizontal spinning effect in the lower
atmosphere. - Spinning horizontal vortex tubes created by
surface wind shear may be tilted and forced in a
vertical path by updrafts. This rising, spinning,
and often stretching rotating air may then turn
into a mesocyclone. - Most strong and violent tornadoes form within
this area of strong rotation.
7Cloud structure of tornado-breeding supercell
storm
Wall cloud forms underneath the mesocyclone when
cold/moist downdraft air feeds into the updraft
and condenses at a lower level than warm air.
8Precipitation (heating) structure of supercell
storm
Contour is radar reflectivity (a measure of
precipitation)
9The most common atmospheric circulation structure
H
L
Radiation Convection
Cooling or No Heating
Heating
Latent/Sensible Conduction
H
L
- Imbalance of heating
- Imbalance of temperature
- Imbalance of pressure
- ? Wind
10 Wind structure of supercell and tornado
H
L
11Life cycle of tornadoes
- Often evolve through a series of stages, from
dust-whirl, to organizing and mature stages, and
ending with the shrinking and decay stages.
12Most violent tornadoes
- Most tornadoes rotate around a single core, some
of the most violent ones have several small zones
of intense rotations called suction vortices.
13Tornado Damage
- Tornadoes are classified by the magnitude of
damage they cause using the (enhanced) Fujita
scale.
14Tornado Outbreak
- The forms causing the largest damages are
families of tornadoes when many occur (gt6), it
is a tornado outbreak - The largest tornado outbreak on record, depending
on the definition applied and time elapsed
between breaks in tornadic activity, was the
April 2528, 2011 tornado outbreak, with as many
as 358 tornadoes. - It surpasses the 1974 Super Outbreak, in which
148 tornadoes were counted. - Another big event is the November 2013 tornado
outbreak, with 136 tornadoes reported.
15Video Deadly 2011 tornado outbreak
- http//www.youtube.com/watch?vmpGcKzI8oBI
16Tornado Occurrence (global)
17Tornado Occurrence (U.S.)
Tornadoes from T-storms in hurricanes
Tornadoes from all 50 states of the U.S. add up
to more than 1000 tornadoes annually, but the
highest frequency is observed in tornado alley of
the Central Plains. Great setting for potent
mixing of air masses.
18The timing of tornadoes
- Nearly 75 of tornadoes form from March to July,
when warm humid air is overlain by cooler drier
air to cause strong vertical lift.
19Trends in U.S. Tornado Occurrence
- As population centers have expanded into formerly
rural areas, there is a greater probability that
a tornado would hit a structure or be observed.
20Fatalities
- Fortunately, most tornadoes kill no one. Some,
unfortunately, are deadly.
21Summary
- 3 stages of supercell tornado formation.
- Tornado outbreak (numbergt6)
- Tornado damage Enhanced Fujita Scale (EF-0 65-85
mph, EF-5 gt200 mph) - Tornado occurrence Global and U.S.. Which
country has the largest number of tornadoes in
the world? Which state has the largest number of
tornadoes per unit area in U.S.? Tornado season
in U.S. (March-July)
22Works cited
- http//www.lakeeriewx.com/Meteo361/ResearchTopicFo
ur/Synoptic.html - http//www.britannica.com/EBchecked/media/19397/To
rnadic-thunderstorm-The-rotating-updraft-that-prod
uces-the-tornado-extends - http//www.geog.ucsb.edu/joel/g266_s10/lecture_no
tes/chapt08/oh10_8_3/oh10_08_3.html - http//www.crh.noaa.gov/lmk/soo/docu/supercell.php