STATUS: 29 March 2018

STATUS: Operations in progress

VORTEX-SE had a very successful mission yesterday, capturing a QLCS tornado (likely EF1 or stronger) within our ground-based triple-Doppler network near Monroe LA. The NOAA P-3 had a difficult time getting close to this tornado because of storms that kept firing ahead of the main QLCS, but it is quite possible that they got close enough to collect Doppler data. And it’s possible that our overall data sets contain more than one tornado. We won’t know for sure until damage assessments are complete, and the data have been examined.

The P-3 is once again airborne, headed toward southern AL. This aircraft can obtain Doppler radar data sets that are worthy of research even if no ground-based systems are available. Today, the activity will be southeast of either of our subdomains… these are areas where the terrain and land use allow us to collect data with mobile Doppler radars and other instruments.

We expect a lull in the data collection for the next few days, with perhaps an uptick toward the middle of next week.

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STATUS: 28 March 2018

STATUS: Operations in progress

As of 2 PM, VORTEX-SE operations are in progress. The NOAA P-3 aircraft is over Mississippi, heading west to begin studying the storms that are moving into western Louisiana.

The University of Louisiana at Monroe is preparing to launch a sounding from campus. Current analyses suggest that the air north of Monroe is perhaps too stable near the ground for much tornado potential, whereas south of Monroe it appears to be more unstable. This sounding will help us assess this issue.

The research radar at the University of Louisiana at Monroe is operating.

The University of Oklahoma SMART-Radars are enroute to their locations in the Monroe subdomain, where they will gather data that will be combined with the ULM research radar and the NOAA P-3 data. The SMART-Radars should be operating around 3 PM.

We expect a QLCS to move through the Monroe subdomain later this afternoon, with decent potential for updraft rotation, and a slight chance of a tornado. Our primary goal is to collect radar data that can help us design better ways to observe Southeast US storms as VORTEX-SE continues.

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STATUS: 16 March 2018

STATUS: IOP today through Monday

VORTEX-SE will be conducting observations over the next several days that are primarily designed to improve our approaches to storm studies in the Southeast.

The brand new University of Oklahoma SMART-Radar has joined the existing SMART-Radar in the Monroe Louisiana area this evening. We have been fairly confident for the past two days that there would not be initiation of significant convection in that region, but we have the radars in place just in case. If a cell(s) formed this evening, we would be able to obtain multiple-Doppler observations teaming up with the University of Louisiana-Monroe S-band research radar. But the atmosphere is gradually stabilizing and quieting down in that area, and research-worthy storms are very unlikely this evening.

Starting tomorrow (Saturday/17 March) our focus will shift up to the northern Alabama subdomain near the University of Alabama-Huntsville (UAH). There, the two OU radars will team up with the UAH ARMOR research radar and the MAX mobile x-band radar, as well as several other important platforms operated by UAH primarily to measure changes in the lower atmosphere at frequent time intervals. The NOAA P-3 hurricane hunter aircraft is also on standby in Huntsville, their base for this spring.

On Saturday and Sunday, strong upper winds will persist across most of the Southeast, and CAPE will gradually be increasing as moisture advances slowly northeast from the western Gulf of Mexico. At just about any time Saturday and Sunday, potentially tornadic (very low probability) storms are possible in the northern Alabama area, so it’s best for us to shift our resources up to that area.

But the main consideration in our decisions today is that the models are suggesting a very potent set up across northern AL on Monday. The forecast looks perilous, and experience suggests that often forecasts of large severe weather probabilities this far in advance do not pan out. But we are watching Monday warily.

Our IOP will likely end Monday night, with a few days of quiet and rest in store after that.

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STATUS: 8 March 2018

Status: GO for Saturday IOP

Teams are enroute, or will soon be, to the Monroe LA subdomain of VORTEX-SE. This is one of two subdomains we will use this year, depending on the forecasted weather.

A narrow mid-tropospheric jet is forecast to be advancing toward Louisiana from the west-northwest on Saturday. To the north of this jet, lift will be strong, likely leading to quite a bit of precipitation and low-level cooling. To the south, the air will be sinking which should enhance the “lid” and possibly limit convection. Between these two regions, there should be a narrow goldilocks zone of sufficient CAPE and strong shear that could support some low-level rotation. Of course, many things can go wrong (and usually do, to the benefit of the general public) with this scenario and any convection may be non-rotating.

We will deploy one mobile C-band “SMART-Radar” from OU to pair with the U. Louisiana-Monroe S-band research radar, and ULM mobile sounding teams. The NOAA P-3 aircraft will likely take off midday Saturday and head toward Louisiana, if this forecast holds up. They will make radar observations of the most interesting storms, and will focus on storms over the ground radar domain near Monroe when storms are present there.

There is a slim chance that there will be tornado potential in the Georgia/N Florida area on Sunday. Although we don’t have a ground subdomain there, the P-3 aircraft may fly a mission to observe storms in that region.

Thereafter, we expect quiet conditions until the following weekend.

One more time with the caveat: forecasting conditions for a field observing program are very different than forecasting for more general purposes. We are generally fine with a “busted forecast”, especially if we are able to obtain data to tell us why we busted. Learning what processes reduce tornado potential are almost as interesting as catching tornadic events. Because tornadoes are rare, we have to observe most everything that comes along with even a little potential. And this spring, our focus is not so much on the physical processes in the atmosphere in the Southeast, but learning how to make much better observations in this difficult region.

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STATUS: 7 MARCH 2018

STATUS: IOP Watch

We are anticipating a possible IOP on Saturday and Saturday night.

A trough will deepen across the northern High Plains late Friday, causing an acceleration of the flow in the upper atmosphere across OK on Saturday. This trough will consolidate somewhat as it approaches MO/AR, and a surface low will deepen fairly rapidly somewhere in the region centered near Memphis.

The developing southerly flow should bring Gulf moisture back into the Arklatex region Friday night, although the confidence in the “quality” of this moisture is not high. A series of runs of the operational GFS show a subtle decrease with time in the forecasted dewpoints across the region on Saturday, and an associated decrease in CAPE. We expect that drier air will remain in place across GA, and perhaps parts of AL, because the pattern and fast-moving wave will not allow moisture to return to those areas. So any complex of storms that develop in the Arklatex region Saturday will eventually run out of juice as they race east.

Another question (seemingly always a major issue in VORTEX-SE) is the likelihood, timing, and effect of an MCS in the Gulf of Mexico. These systems are probably associated with subtle waves in the jet stream, and those waves may not be well forecast until within 24 hours of passage because prior to that time they are somewhere out over the Pacific.

The current best guess is that storms will form in far east Texas on Saturday, with at least some tornado potential, and roll east across Louisiana in the evening, and perhaps into MS/AL during the night. We expect that our most likely subdomain for combined airborne and surface radar observations will be the U. Louisiana-Monroe subdomain.

Bear in mind when reading these discussions that we are forecasting conditions required for successful research operations. We have a very high tolerance for erroneous forecasts of possible tornadoes; they are a rare phenomenon and it is a lot more painful to miss an observing opportunity than it is to be operating and nothing happens.

A final IOP decision will be made Thursday afternoon, 8 March.

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UPDATE 1… 30 April 2017

Two rotating storms within a QLCS are moving toward the domain:

The field teams are seeing a map something like this, with the storms annotated as A and B.  The Purdue and Texas Tech teams (green dots on the NW-SE hiway) are moving into position to collect data on Storm A.  Other teams have been deployed on Sand Mountain in the northeast corner of this map to observe the storms later this afternoon and evening.

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STATUS: 30 April 2017

This is the last observing day of the 2017 Spring Campaign.  Our project window extends through May 8, but by the end of today, we will have exhausted most of our project resources.

This may be shaping up to be one of the more interesting days of the project.  An initial band of tornadic storms is racing east through Mississippi early this morning.  It looks like this first line will make it through the domain by midday to early afternoon.  The atmospheric profiles ahead of this line are not going to be particularly favorable for tornadoes in northern AL.  But there is the possibility that this line will leave behind an outflow boundary that could retreat back north through AL toward evening.  When this happens, the low-level shear could become very large, and the thermodynamic profiles may be quite favorable near the ground for tornadoes.

Even with the system 12 h away, it is nearly impossible to forecast the details.  So we’re excited about the potential gain of knowledge to make these events easier to forecast in the future.

Our Texas Tech and Purdue research teams are already heading west toward MS, hoping to sample the cold pool and precipitation produced by this initial line.  Later, they will probably retreat east or southeast ahead of the possible second round of severe convection.  Our radar and profiler teams are headed to the Sand Mountain plateau east of Huntsville to get one more comprehensive data set on the evolution of flow and low-level thermodynamics in complex terrain, ahead of and during severe storm episodes.  The NOAA hurricane hunter aircraft will be departing Huntsville around 2 PM and use their Doppler radar systems to study individual severe storms.  And toward mid-morning we will have about 10 sounding teams across northern AL and MS sampling the atmosphere every hour or two.

I will try to sneak in another blog post or two as this event unfolds.

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update 28 April

The storms failed to form so far, and there are no strong indications that they will form.  So we are pulling the more western teams back in toward the area just north of Lake Wheeler, near Decatur, AL.  We will spend the rest of the day observing the features that evolve in the lowest kilometer or so of the atmosphere in response to variations in land use and land cover, including lake/land contrasts.  This information should be important to help folks who work on forecast models to evaluate the performance of those models.

 

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STATUS: 28 Apr 2017

I am blogging from the SWIRLL facility at UA-Huntsville.

We came in this morning for a 10 AM meeting, expecting to design a clear-air boundary layer study to look at land use/land cover variations, and lake breeze effects in the area west of Huntsville.  The model guidance from yesterday generally showed our area too stable for storms.

But (there’s always a BUT in VORTEX-SE)… this morning the HRRR model showed rotating storms developing over our research domain in the early afternoon.  This forecast has persisted for the last 4-5 hours at least, with consistent forecasts of rotating updrafts moving across our western observing area.

So, we adapted by quickly moving one sounding unit and one radar further west in case these storms form.  If we don’t have storm initiation in the next hour or so, we will bring these two units back closer to Huntsville, and do the “clear-air” experiment for the rest of the day.

Our two western-most mobile radars are SR2 and PMXP, and their “dual-Doppler” coverage extends west out across the Florence/Muscle Shoals area.  Dual-Doppler means that the along-beam velocity from each radar can be combined geometrically to compute the actual wind direction and speed at every point seen by the two radars.  The uncertainty in this wind computation is smallest when the two radar beams cross at large angles, and the wind becomes very uncertain as the two beam directions get closer together.

Tomorrow there will probably be no observing in the VORTEX-SE domain.  Sunday continues to look like an active day.  But if we have learned anything this year, it’s that these strong systems have a variety of “failure modes”.  They typically look very promising for severe weather for several days leading up to the event, and then something goes awry and no/few tornadic storms occur.

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STATUS: 26 April 2017

STATUS: IOP

I have been a bit too busy to blog for a while.  Basically, it’s been status quo for VORTEX-SE the last few weeks, with huge forecast difficulties costing us an event last weekend.  We had decided to hold an IOP, but then we cancelled it when the numerical models suggested a very slim chance of tornadoes.  But they were wrong, and there were two interesting supercells in the domain.

Some of our difficulties relate to the fact that we have a domain about eight counties in size.  I don’t think we would ever confine ourselves to eight counties in the Plains, and hope to learn about tornado formation in a domain of that size.  And the best eight counties we’ve found in the Southeast U.S. (northern Alabama) are not very well suited to traditional tornado research.

But we are back at it again.  Tonight, a line of convection will move into AL from the west.  Most of the models are suggesting that this line will weaken as it moves into AL, and pose only a very small tornado threat.  However, the operational HRRR model shows the line breaking up, and then more discrete cells developing within the overall area of convection in northern Alabama.  Some of these are forecast to have rotating updrafts.

The teams are here through Sunday.  So there is no huge cost to operating tonight.  We may also operate on Friday… this should be a high-CAPE day with weaker shear, and little chance of storm initiation.  So if we operate, we will be looking at land use and land cover influences, including lake breezes west of Huntsville.  We will cross our fingers that initiation does occur close to where we are operating.

And Sunday continues to look like a fairly big event, but we have learned that there are a lot of ways for these big waves to fail to be associated with tornadoes.  Sunday will be the last operations day for VORTEX-SE in 2017.

I will likely blog again later this evening as the line of activity moves into our research area.

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