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Severe Weather: Tornadoes Harold E. Brooks NOAA/National Severe Storms Laboratory Norman, Oklahoma

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Presentation on theme: "Severe Weather: Tornadoes Harold E. Brooks NOAA/National Severe Storms Laboratory Norman, Oklahoma"— Presentation transcript:

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2 Severe Weather: Tornadoes Harold E. Brooks NOAA/National Severe Storms Laboratory Norman, Oklahoma Harold.Brooks@noaa.gov

3 Definition Tornado-violently rotating column of air in contact with the ground associated with a thunderstorm or developing thunderstorm –Waterspout-tornado over water –Intensity measured by damage with Fujita scale (F0-F5)

4 US Averages Mean annual damage~$500M –Highly variable –Expect a $1B tornado once per decade Expected death toll~40 per year

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13 Regression slope=14/year

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15 2008 Max, min 10 th, 90 th %iles 25 th, 75 th %iles Median

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17 Permanent Homes Mobile Homes

18 Changes on individual days Preliminary reports are what comes in within a few days Final reports –Bad data –Late reports come in (+) –Multiple reports of same tornado (-)

19 T=86 W=129 H=411

20 T=57 W=125 H=593

21 m=-0.1 m=-0.4

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25 Fujita scale Rates tornado damage from 0 to 5 Tornadoes in US rated by maximum damage point

26 Wurman and Alexander (2004) Relationship between tornadic winds and damage (more than just a function of F-rating—damage is a complex function of wind duration, acceleration, direction, etc.)

27 F2+ Tornadoes (1951-1995)

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33 nontornadic tornadic

34 June 24, 2003 near Manchester, SD (Courtesy of Tim Samaras) In situ observations in tornadoes

35 “Ingredients” for severe thunderstorms-the supercell Thunderstorms –Low-level warm, moist air –Mid-level (~2-10 km) relatively cold, dry air –Something to lift the warm, moist air Organization –Winds that increase and change direction with height over lowest few km –From equator at surface, west aloft

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39 Tornadogenesis Deep, weak rotation starts –Environmental wind shear Rotation near surface starts –Probably due to evaporation of rain → temperature gradients → rotation Rotation intensifies (ice skater effect?)

40 Environmental conditions Significant severe thunderstorms (10% biggest events, including F2+ tornadoes) –More consistent in observations, more easily distinguished

41 Environment-Event Relationships Ingredients based –Define events in terms of environmental conditions Storm “strength”-CAPE or Wmax Organization-0-6 km wind shear Initiation?

42 Datasets Storm Prediction Center severe weather reports (1991-9) Environmental conditions from “reanalysis” –1.9x1.9 lat/lon spacing, every 6 hours –3.75 million soundings Focus on significant severe thunderstorms Smooth using Gaussian kernel

43 Significant Severe Weather Locations (1991-1999)

44 Shear Wmax CAPE 200 800180032005000

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46 Wmax CAPE 200 800180032005000

47 Hail Wind Tornado Conditional Probability of Events Given Any Significant Event

48 Interannual Variability of Environments Departures from long-term average Look at patterns of more and less than normal

49 19731998 19871988 + + + + - - -

50 Hail (3 in) Wind (75 kt) Tornado (F3) Conditional Probability of Really Big Events

51 Climate model simulations Three main groups (so far) –GISS (parameterized updraft) –Oklahoma/Melbourne –Purdue Look at favorable conditions –Concentrate on changes in model world

52 (Del Genio et al., 2007) Changes in Environments in Doubled CO2 (GISS)

53 (Marsh et al., 2009)

54 Convective Initiation Biggest frequency change in environments in summer Initiation less probable in summer for given environment

55 Trapp et al. (2008) Regional Analyses

56 S06 (m/s) CAPE N DSEV,P (days)

57 Summarizing Trapp Statistically significant increases in CAPE, decreases in shear Severe weather days increase in all regions, not significant in Southern Great Plains

58 What do we know? Reports aren’t very reliable Wind vs. hail/tornado Intensity is function of shear Future –Favorable severe environments may go up –Frequency increase for wind more likely –Intensity distribution may shift slightly –Initiation is still a question


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