An energetic, negatively-tilted shortwave trough traversed the middle of the country last week, bringing several bouts of severe weather to the Great Plains. By visualizing the accumulation of the ProbSevere output (storm centroids ≥ 50% [pink boxes]), the NWS warnings (orange and red polygons), and storm reports (blue, green, and red circles), we see that the ProbSevere model handled the first event on October 4th quite well, at least qualitatively.
Figure 1: A toggle between the 12Z 10/4 ->12Z 10/5 accumulation of NWS warnings and reports, with overlaid ProbSevere centroids greater than or equal to 50%.
A very long-lived storm that approached the Norman, OK area produced numerous hail reports. It was first identified at 23:47 UTC, with a probability exceeding 60%, due to high effective bulk shear, MUCAPE, and strong satellite growth rates. The MESH was 0.24" and total flash rate was only 1 fl/min. After quick jumps in the MESH (to ~0.5") and the flash rate (to almost 20 fl/min), the probability exceeded 80%, and was promptly warned at 23:52 UTC. We can see a time series of the ProbSevere probability (thick red line) and constituent predictors in the time series below. Note that the satellite growth rates were both 'Strong', and expired a little after 02:00Z. We can also see when NWS warnings were valid and when severe weather was reported in the lower subplot.
Figure 2: Time series of ProbSevere and its predictors (top), and NWS severe weather warnings and severe weather reports (bottom). The axes on the right are associated with the time series on the top subplot, while the legend in the lower right is associated with the bottom subplot.
The stunning time lapse of this storm was captured by Jim Ladue (NOAA/NWS/WDTD) as it approached from the west. The range of this video is from about 23:52 UTC (when the storm was first warned) to nearly 01:00 UTC.
A second short-wave ejected through the Plains on October 6-7 (as Hurricane Matthew threatened the southeastern seaboard), bringing with it another bout of storms, and this time, numerous tornadoes. ProbSevere again handled most storms quite well, with few false alarms and a couple of missed wind reports.
Figure 3: A toggle between the 12Z 10/6->12Z 10/7 accumulation of NWS warnings and reports, with overlaid ProbSevere centroids greater than or equal to 50%.
We can see the evolution of the storms and associated warnings below, over Kansas, Oklahoma, and far northern Texas. The animation is from 18:30UTC to 00:00UTC every 10 minutes. The pre-frontal storms and those close to the triple-point (in north central KS) remain discrete longer than those which are forced by the cold front. The red, orange, and green polygons denote NWS tornado, severe thunderstorm, and flash flood warnings.
Figure 4: Animation of ProbSevere contours, NWS polygons, and MRMS MergedReflectivity from 20161006-18:30Z to 20161007-00:00Z .
No comments:
Post a Comment