Tornadogenesis and Early Tornado Evolution in the El Reno, Oklahoma, Supercell on 31 May 2013Source: Monthly Weather Review:;2019:;volume 147:;issue 006::page 2045DOI: 10.1175/MWR-D-18-0338.1Publisher: American Meteorological Society
Abstract: AbstractThis study documents the formation and part of the early evolution of a large, violent tornado near El Reno, Oklahoma, based on data from a mobile, polarimetric, rapid scan, X-band, Doppler radar. The main circulation associated with the tornado formed near the ground initially, ~90 s prior to the development of the vertically coherent vortex, which built upward through a vertical column of at least 3.5 km in less than 20 s, the update time of the Doppler radar data. Strong but broad rotation from 500 m to 1.5 km AGL also preceded the formation of the tornado at the surface by several minutes. A precipitation-loaded downdraft was observed in the right-forward flank of the storm, which could have enhanced evaporative cooling and allowed for a faster rate of baroclinic generation of low-level horizontal vorticity, while descending reflectivity cores in the right-rear quadrant might have enhanced low-level convergence to the rear of or along the leading edge of the rear-flank gust front. The intensification of the tornado occurred in spurts, not steadily, perhaps owing to surges in momentum at the surface associated with the precipitation-laden downdrafts. The tornado was highly tilted even when it was intensifying, calling into question the importance of a vertical juxtaposition of the mesocyclone aloft and the tornado at the surface. In this case study, while the development of a weak-echo hole was evidence of rotation, the absence of one did not mean that there was not a strong vortex, owing to the lofting of debris.
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contributor author | Bluestein, Howard B. | |
contributor author | Thiem, Kyle J. | |
contributor author | Snyder, Jeffrey C. | |
contributor author | Houser, Jana B. | |
date accessioned | 2019-10-05T06:55:13Z | |
date available | 2019-10-05T06:55:13Z | |
date copyright | 3/22/2019 12:00:00 AM | |
date issued | 2019 | |
identifier other | MWR-D-18-0338.1.pdf | |
identifier uri | http://yetl.yabesh.ir/yetl1/handle/yetl/4263836 | |
description abstract | AbstractThis study documents the formation and part of the early evolution of a large, violent tornado near El Reno, Oklahoma, based on data from a mobile, polarimetric, rapid scan, X-band, Doppler radar. The main circulation associated with the tornado formed near the ground initially, ~90 s prior to the development of the vertically coherent vortex, which built upward through a vertical column of at least 3.5 km in less than 20 s, the update time of the Doppler radar data. Strong but broad rotation from 500 m to 1.5 km AGL also preceded the formation of the tornado at the surface by several minutes. A precipitation-loaded downdraft was observed in the right-forward flank of the storm, which could have enhanced evaporative cooling and allowed for a faster rate of baroclinic generation of low-level horizontal vorticity, while descending reflectivity cores in the right-rear quadrant might have enhanced low-level convergence to the rear of or along the leading edge of the rear-flank gust front. The intensification of the tornado occurred in spurts, not steadily, perhaps owing to surges in momentum at the surface associated with the precipitation-laden downdrafts. The tornado was highly tilted even when it was intensifying, calling into question the importance of a vertical juxtaposition of the mesocyclone aloft and the tornado at the surface. In this case study, while the development of a weak-echo hole was evidence of rotation, the absence of one did not mean that there was not a strong vortex, owing to the lofting of debris. | |
publisher | American Meteorological Society | |
title | Tornadogenesis and Early Tornado Evolution in the El Reno, Oklahoma, Supercell on 31 May 2013 | |
type | Journal Paper | |
journal volume | 147 | |
journal issue | 6 | |
journal title | Monthly Weather Review | |
identifier doi | 10.1175/MWR-D-18-0338.1 | |
journal fristpage | 2045 | |
journal lastpage | 2066 | |
tree | Monthly Weather Review:;2019:;volume 147:;issue 006 | |
contenttype | Fulltext |