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Tornado Maintenance Investigated With HIGH-RESOLUTION Dual-doppler and ENKF Analysis

Abstract

Dual-Doppler wind synthesis and ensemble Kalman filter analyses produced by assimilating Doppler-on-Wheels velocity data collected in four tornadic supercells are examined in order to further understand the maintenance of tornadoes. Although tornado-scale features are not resolved in these analyses, larger-scale processes involved with tornado maintenance are well represented. The longest-lived tornado is maintained underneath the midlevel updraft within a zone of low-level horizontal convergence along a rear-flank gust front for a considerable time, and dissipates when horizontally displaced from the midlevel updraft. The shortest-lived tornado resides in a similar zone of low-level convergence briefly, but dissipates underneath the location of the midlevel updraft when the updraft becomes tilted and low-level convergence is displaced several kilometers from the tornado. This suggests that a location beneath the midlevel updraft is not always a sufficient condition for tornado maintenance, particularly in the presence of strongly surging outflow. Tornadoes in two other storms persist within a band of low-level convergence in the outflow air (a possible secondary rear-flank gust front), suggesting that tornado maintenance can occur away from the main boundary separating the outflow air and the ambient environment. In at least one case, tilting of horizontal vorticity occurs near the tornado along the secondary gust front, as evidenced by three-dimensional vortex line arching. This observation suggests that a relatively cold secondary rear-flank downdraft may assist with tornado maintenance through the baroclinic generation and tilting of horizontal vorticity, despite the fact that parcels composing them would be more negatively buoyant than the preceding outflow air.

Article / Publication Data
Active/Online
YES
Volume
140
Available Metadata
Accepted On
June 27, 2011
DOI ↗
Fiscal Year
Publication Name
Monthly Weather Review
Published On
January 01, 2012
Final Online Publication On
January 01, 2012
Print Volume
140
Print Number
1
Page Range
3–27
Submitted On
January 24, 2011
URL ↗

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