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Lecture 24: Thunder & Tornadoes (Ch 11) general statements about tornados soundings associated with severe thunderstorms & tornadoes July 1987 Edmonton F4 tornado http://www.iassistdata.org/tornado/ Bob Charlton responsible for above web report on Edmonton’s 1987 tornado (F4)
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always in conjunction with Cumulonimbus? diameter usually order 100 m, may be over a kilometer (record: 4 km) lifetime minutes to (rarely) hours translation speed typically of order 50 kph Tornadoes may occur with any type of severe weather system: frontal boundaries, squall lines, MCC’s; most severe associated with supercells
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K.D. Hage’s (2003) tornado climatology: since 1879, an average of about 10 tornadoes over Alberta each year (max: 26 in 1982) majority rotate cyclonically pressure depression at axis ( p ) up to 100 mb centripetal accel’n pressure gradient force equating, (tornado’s centreline velocity adds to or subtracts from this rotational speed)
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Photo by Jeremy Smith. From Houze’s Cloud Atlas, U. Washington Mesoscale Group Wall cloud below a supercell cumulonimbus in Nebraska Supercell storm single powerful cell slowly rotating core aloft (meso-cyclone)
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Thomson et al, 2003; Weather & Forecasting, Vol. 18) sounding near a supercell note wind shear saturated ascent would produce large temperature excess, ie. much “CAPE” (convectively available potential energy) “loaded gun” sounding T Td
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Fig 11-25 Is vortex tilting the mechanism to produce the meso-cyclone? uncertain, speculative explanation how would this explain preponderance of cyclonically rotating tornadoes? Ambient wind shear typically more complex than this
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wall cloud in rotating supercell updraft forms below base of main cloud is preferred loction for tornado funnel cloud emerges from base of wall cloud… visible due to dust & debris & condensation
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Edmonton tornado contact with ground for 1 hour plus, starting 1500 MDT moved due N., covered about 37 km width varied 100 – 1300 m
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Edmonton in trough exit region southerly aloft (whereas NE at surface) Synoptic setting 250 mb (a) (a)12Z 31 st (b) (b)00Z 1 st (sharpening trough)
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Fig. 2 from Smith & Yau (1993; Monthly Weather Review, Vol. 121). Mountain-plain circulation low-level upslope towards Rockies Cb at 0600 high T d weak low in SW Ab Conceptual model of a “cap”
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Unusually high boundary-layer humidity Fig. 3 from Smith & Yau (1993; Monthly Weather Review, Vol. 121) afternoon dewpoints near 20 o C, a near record colliding sfc winds (convergence)
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12 Z Fri July 31, 1987 moistadiabat dryadiabat T TdTdTdTdForecasts: afternoon temperature 25 o C large CAPE note capping abs. stable layer at about 750 mb
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Edmonton sounding at (a) 12Z 31 st Jul 1987, and (b) 00Z 1 st Aug 1987 (from "A case study of three severe tornadic storms in Alberta, Canada," by Dupilka & Reuter)
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12Z Fri 31 Jul
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00Z Sat 1 Aug
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rapidly developing low 00Z 1 st 12Z 31 st
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from the Edmonton Sun
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whole troposphere moist very stable below 750 mb Sounding, 12Z Mon 6 Nov., 2006
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