Affiliation:
1. a Department of Atmospheric Sciences, University of North Dakota, Grand Forks, North Dakota
Abstract
Abstract
Tornado motion changes occurring with major internal rear-flank momentum surges are examined in three significant tornado-producing supercells. The analysis primarily uses fixed-site Doppler radar data, but also utilizes in situ and videographic observations when available. In the cases examined, the peak lowest-level remotely sensed or in situ rear-flank surge wind speeds ranged from 48 to at least 63 m s−1. Contemporaneous with major surges impacting the tornadoes and their parent low-level mesocyclones, longer-duration tornado heading changes were leftward and ranged from 30° to 55°. In all cases, the tornado speed increased substantially upon surge impact, with tornado speeds approximately doubling in two of the events. A storm-relative change in the hook echo orientation accompanied the major surges and provided a signal that a marked leftward heading change for an ongoing tornado was under way. Concurrent with the surge interaction, the hook echo tip and associated low-level mesocyclone turned leftward while also moving in a storm-relative downshear direction. The major rear-flank internal surges influenced tornado motion such that a generally favorable storm updraft-relative position was maintained. In all cases, the tornado lasted well beyond (≥21 min) the time of the surge-associated left turn with no evident marked loss of intensity until well down-track of the turn. The local momentum balance between outflow and inflow that bounds the tornado or its parent circulation, especially the directionality evolution of the bounding momentum, is the most apparent explanation for tornado down-track or off-track accelerations in the featured events.
Funder
National Science Foundation
Publisher
American Meteorological Society
Reference83 articles.
1. A numerical simulation of cyclic mesocyclogenesis;Adlerman, E. J.,1999
2. Multiple vortex features in the tornado cyclone and the occurrence of tornado families;Agee, E.,1976
3. High-resolution dual-Doppler analysis of the 29 May 2001 Kress, Texas, cyclic supercell;Beck, J. R.,2006
4. The formation and early evolution of the Greensburg, Kansas, tornadic supercell on 4 May 2007;Bluestein, H. B.,2009
5. The vertical structure of a tornado near Happy, Texas, on 5 May 2002: High-resolution, mobile, W-band, Doppler radar observations;Bluestein, H. B.,2004