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Introduction to Severe Weather Analysis

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Random Obligatory Tornado Image (courtesy numerous sources) Severe Weather Diagnosis ... Significant Tornado Index (SigTor), etc. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Introduction to Severe Weather Analysis


1
Introduction to Severe Weather Analysis
  • A Sounding Perspective
  • Clark Evans
  • Current Weather Discussion
  • 5 March 2008

2
What is meant by severe weather?
  • Tornadoes of any intensity
  • Significant winds (gusts gt 58 mph)
  • Significant hail (diameter gt 0.75, or
    penny-sized)
  • Each requires a thunderstorm of sufficient
    organization to occur and be counted as severe
  • Winds can gust above severe thresholds due to
    pressure gradients, etc. but are not
    thunderstorm-based and thus not severe

3
Severe Weather Ingredients
  • For thunderstorms, a checklist of three
    ingredients
  • Moisture
  • Instability
  • Lift (often referred to as a trigger)
  • For severe weather, a fourth ingredient is
    needed
  • Vertical wind shear

4
Moisture and Instability
  • Contribute to CAPE (Convectively Available
    Potential Energy)
  • Provide positive buoyant energy that can energize
    updrafts
  • Reflected at the surface (e.g. dewpoint) as well
    as in upper-level temperatures and lapse rates

5
Lift/Trigger
  • Oftentimes comes in the form of a boundary
  • Cold/warm front
  • Dry line
  • Sea breeze
  • Outflow boundary, etc.
  • Can also be found on larger-scales
  • E.g. Q-G Lift from positive vorticity advection
  • Necessary to allow updrafts to access CAPE and
    help overcome any potential capping

6
Vertical Wind Shear
  • Allows for the organization of thunderstorms into
    cellular structures
  • Weaker wind shear multicell structures
  • Stronger wind shear discrete/semi-discrete
  • Allows for the development of rotation within the
    storm
  • Mesocyclones
  • Rotating updrafts, etc.
  • Less vertical wind shear can be made up for by
    higher CAPE and vice versa!
  • Important in summer/winter events respectively

7
Random Obligatory Tornado Image
(courtesy numerous sources)
8
Severe Weather Diagnosis
  • On the synoptic-scale, upper air charts, surface
    maps, and instability analyses are often used as
    a first guess toward severe potential
  • 300/500 hPa wind, height, vorticity fields
  • 700/850 hPa wind, height, moisture, temperature
    fields
  • Surface pressure, temperature, dewpoint, wind
    fields
  • Surface-based CAPE, CIN (Convective Inhibition)
    fields
  • This is not meant to be an exhaustive listing

9
Severe Weather Diagnosis
  • On the mesoscale, however, sounding analysis
    becomes much more critical
  • Soundings allow for the diagnosis of instability,
    capping, vertical wind variations, storm motion,
    and much more
  • Well focus on dissecting severe weather
    soundings in this lecture today

10
Sounding Example
(courtesy Storm Prediction Center)
11
Parcel Parameters
  • Surface based upon currently-observed surface
    data
  • Mixed layer based upon averaged temperature and
    mixing ratio in lowest 100 hPa
  • MU most unstable based upon parcel in lowest
    300 hPa with highest theta-e value
  • Fcst Surface same as mixed layer, except using a
    surface temperature from the observed 850 hPa
    temperature
  • Drop dry adiabatically to surface and add 2C

12
Which to use?
  • Surface and mixed layer views give a good
    approximation to what surface-based storms have
    available to them
  • Recall tornadic storms must be surface-based
  • Forecast surface has significant limitations that
    must be understood
  • Why the temperature may not get to the forecast
    temperature, effects of moisture on instability,
    etc.
  • Most unstable is best when convection is likely
    to be elevated (e.g. atop a warm front)
  • Hail is the predominant severe threat in such
    situations

13
Stability-Related Parameters
  • CAPE available buoyant energy
  • Integrated area where T(parcel)gtT(sounding)
  • CIN convective inhibition
  • Integrated area where T(parcel)ltT(sounding)
  • LCL lifting condensation level
  • Saturation via lifting
  • Cloud base height estimate
  • LI lifted index
  • T(environment)-T(parcel) at 500 hPa
  • LFC level of free convection
  • Level at which CIN ends and CAPE begins

14
Stability Parameters
  • For severe weather, high CAPE and low to minimal
    CIN values are required
  • CIN is not always a bad thing, though (discrete
    storm modes, etc.)
  • Lower LCLs suggest lower storm bases and deeper
    storms
  • More negative LIs suggest an increased hail
    potential and often correlate to high CAPE values
  • Lower LFCs suggest freely buoyant convection at
    lower levels and often also correlate to high
    CAPE values

15
Sounding Example
(courtesy Storm Prediction Center)
16
Moisture/Thermal Parameters
  • We wont be considering all of these parameters,
    just the most significant/less esoteric ones
  • Primarily relate to moisture content, downdraft
    potential, hail size, and thermal buoyancy

17
Moisture Parameters
  • PW precipitable water integrated water content
    in the lowest 400 hPa
  • K K-Index comparison of mid-level lapse rates
    to low-level moisture (30-40 deep convection)
  • MidRH mid-level relative humidity lower
    suggests enhanced evaporative cooling/downdraft
    potential
  • LowRH low-level relative humidity higher
    suggests lower LCLs (and potentially lower LFCs
    and higher CAPE)

18
CAPE Parameters
  • 3CAPE CAPE in the lowest 3 km higher is better
    and suggests low LCLs and large lapse rates
  • DCAPE downdraft CAPE factor of dry air and
    evaporative cooling potential in lowest 400 hPa
  • Higher values, particularly gt1000 J/kg, suggest
    enhanced downdraft potential

19
Thermal Parameters
  • WBZ height of the wet bulb 0C isotherm lower
    values suggest less hail melting
  • FZL height of the environmental 0C isotherm
  • ConvT convective temperature temperature parcel
    must warm to for surface-based inhibition to be
    overcome
  • MaxT estimated maximum temperature similar to
    forecast surface value from before except from
    100 hPa above ground level

20
Sounding Example
(courtesy Storm Prediction Center)
21
Lapse Rate Parameters
  • Note First and third/second and fourth listings
    are similar to one another
  • All represent the average environmental
    temperature lapse rate in the given layer
  • Higher lapse rates environment cools more
    quickly with increasing height potential for
    greater CAPE values
  • Lower lapse rates moister column possibly
    indicative of capping concerns

22
Sounding Example
(courtesy Storm Prediction Center)
23
Hodograph Analysis
  • Take the wind vectors from the sounding, starting
    at the surface.
  • Draw arrows pointing toward where wind is blowing
  • Length given by wind speed
  • Connect the ends of those arrows

24
Hodograph Analysis
  • What does the hodograph tell us?
  • It graphically shows how winds vary with height
  • It can be used to infer storm motion
  • More importantly, however, it allows us to
    calculate and obtain helicity!

25
Helicity Calculation
  • Helicity is simply the area underneath the curve
    of the hodograph!
  • Different curves are obviously selected for the
    desired helicity levels (0-1 km, etc.)
  • Storm-relative helicity is similar but uses
    projected storm motion as its basis

26
Sounding Example
(courtesy Storm Prediction Center)
27
Helicity and Shear Parameters
  • Thunderstorm organization relies on vertical wind
    shear, particularly in the lowest 6-8 km
  • Mesocyclone development relies on lower-level
    vertical wind shear
  • 0-1, 0-3 km ? perhaps even lower
  • Storm motion (storm-relative flow) must be taken
    into account, however.

28
Helicity and Shear Parameters
  • Most important value SFC 6 km Shear
  • Determines predominant storm mode
  • Weak (lt20 kt) pulse convection
  • Moderate (lt50 kt) multicellular storms
  • Strong (gt50 kt) supercell structures possible

29
Helicity and Shear Parameters
  • Next most important value storm motion estimate
  • Used in helicity calculations
  • Most concerned with right moving motion about
    95 of the time
  • Obtained from the SFC-6 km shear vector and the
    SFC-6 km wind estimate

30
Helicity and Shear Parameters
  • What exactly is helicity?
  • Helicity is a measure of vertical vorticity
  • Contrast ?, relative vorticity, is the vertical
    component of the horizontal vorticity
  • Why is it important?
  • It is a measure of the strength of the vertical
    environmental circulations

31
Helicity and Shear Parameters
  • But wait, arent mesocyclones and tornadoes
    horizontal features?
  • This is where the updraft becomes important!
  • The updraft tilts the vertical circulations into
    the horizontal
  • thus allowing for mesocyclone and potentially
    tornadic formation!
  • Another example of why we need both
    buoyancy/instability and vertical wind shear for
    severe thunderstorm formation.

32
Helicity and Shear Parameters
  • SFC 1 km storm-relative helicity (SRH) in the
    lowest 1 km
  • SFC 3 km SRH in the lowest 3 km
  • Eff Inflow Layer SRH in the effective inflow
    layer
  • Effective inflow layer is determined as the layer
    where all parcels, starting at the ground, have gt
    100 J/kg CAPE and gt -250 J/kg CIN

33
Additional Parameters
  • On soundings, you may find any number of other
    parameters
  • Total Totals (TT)
  • Bulk Richardson Number (BRN)
  • Supercell Composite Index
  • Significant Tornado Index (SigTor), etc.
  • Most of these involve some combination of shear
    (whether vertical shear or something like
    helicity) and CAPE to estimate severe potential

34
Summary
  • There are four ingredients needed for severe
    convection moisture, instability, lift, and
    vertical wind shear
  • These ingredients need to be assessed and
    diagnosed on both the synoptic and mesoscales
    when forecasting or analyzing severe weather

35
Summary
  • On the mesoscale, sounding analysis is a very
    effective means of analyzing the ingredients
    necessary for severe thunderstorms
  • Caution must be exercised, though, as soundings
    can and do change
  • Air mass changes (e.g. temperature advection)
  • Entrance or exit of jet streaks, etc.

36
Whats Next?
  • Despite all that we went into today, there is a
    lot still left to be covered
  • Synoptic-scale severe weather forecasting
  • Radar analysis
  • Severe convection storm modes
  • Linear, discrete, MCS/MCVs, QLCS, etc.
  • Left splitting vs. right splitting cells
  • More?
  • Well get into these topics over the coming weeks.
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