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RESEARCH ON THE STORM FRONT By Sean
Henahan, Access Excellence
BOULDER, CO (May 29, 1996)-
Supercomputers and hurricane-hunting high
altitiude aircraft are among the tools used by scientists at the
National Center for Atmospheric Research (NCAR) who are
investigating how storms develop and how they might better be
predicted.
Very small differences in air temperature and moisture can make
the difference between a sunny day and major thunderstorm.
Indeed, a temperature difference of only 1/16 of a degree C,
which falls within the error of most weather observations, can
spell the difference between potentially severe storms and no
rain at all. Similarly small discrepancies in moisture can
have the same effect.
NCAR scientists are using computer models of the atmosphere to
conduct forward-sensitivity experiments. These bring a set of
slightly varying scenarios forward in time to see how a given
weather situation might evolve. Wind, temperature, and moisture
values were derived from surface, radar, and radiosonde (weather
balloon) observations. On average, these data had temperature
errors of around 1/16 degree C and errors in liquid water
content of around 1 gram per kilogram (g/kg). The latter is
about 7 to 10% of the total atmospheric moisture present on a
typical warm, humid day.
The researchers found that a temperature decrease of 1/16 degree
C was enough to shut off storm development entirely, while a
1/16 degree increase led to a fourfold increase in rainfall.
Similarly, rainfall dropped by 80% when liquid water content was
lowered by 1 g/kg, while it more than doubled for a 1 g/kg
increase. These findings reinforce the difficulty in
forecasting where and when thunderstorms might develop on days
when conditions are borderline. However, knowing the possible
impact of observational error should help forecasters better
quantify the uncertainty in a forecast.
NOAA Graphic: Tornado Alley
NCAR scientists have also developed a forecasting tool called
"Auto-nowcaster." The automated thunderstorm forecasting tool
is now undergoing its first major real-world test this summer.
The Auto-nowcaster, which spots incipient storms and predicts
their development up to a half-hour in advance, will be tested
beginning in June at the Federal Aviation Administration's
Integrated Terminal Weather Support Site near Memphis,
Tennessee.
A cumulus cloud can blossom into a thunderstorm in as little as
10 to 20 minutes. Although operational computer forecast models
have proven useful in predicting large-scale weather
developments 12 to 48 hours in advance, they do not have the
resolution to make accurate forecasts on the thunderstorm scale.
With help from new techniques for analyzing Doppler radar data,
the auto-nowcaster looks for gust fronts and other lines of
converging air on which storms might be induced to form. These
boundaries cannot be simulated directly by larger-scale computer
models.
Other parts of the auto-nowcaster examine whether atmospheric
conditions are sufficient to support storms once formed and how
storm motion might evolve over time.
"It has been a major team effort to get the auto-nowcaster ready
for field testing," says project manager Jim Wilson, "and we are
very anxious to get feedback from this summer's test. We expect
the auto-nowcaster will be issuing thunderstorm advisories on
its own in the near future."
NCAR researchers will also be using airplanes and mobile radar
to probe the chemistry of Colorado's notoriously intense
thunderstorms. The project is aimed at documenting the chemical,
dynamical, and electrical interchange between thunderstorms and
their environments.
Entitled "Deep Convection and the Composition of the Upper
Troposphere and Lower Stratosphere," the field program will take
place in northeast Colorado during late June and July. It is
one of three parts of STERAO, the Stratosphere-Troposphere
Experiments: Radiation, Aerosols, and Ozone. STERAO is a
multiyear study of the chemistry and dynamics of the upper
troposphere (the atmosphere's lowest 15 kilometers, where our
weather is shaped) and the lower stratosphere (the sensitive
zone between 15 and 45 kilometers where the earth's protective
ozone layer resides).
Water vapor and nitrogen are of particular interest in STERAO.
Thunderstorms bring vast amounts of water vapor from the lower
to the upper troposphere, but the exact trajectories are
uncertain. Lightning is a significant source of active
nitrogen, which can lead to the production of ozone, but the
nitrogen's sources and sinks are not yet fully understood.
A high-altitude WB-57F aircraft, recently acquired by the
National Science Foundation and operated by NCAR, is expected to
make its research debut at STERAO. Also in the plans are a P-3
"hurricane hunter" aircraft from NOAA and a Citation operated by
the University of North Dakota.
Among the instruments probing the Colorado storms will be: two
mobile Doppler radars that can gather data from within several
kilometers of severe storms; a lightning interferometer that
will make unique three-dimensional observations of lightning
channels; and a variety of devices for air sampling and analysis
aboard the aircraft to assess the chemical make-up of air in and
near the storms at both high and low altitudes.
Details on these research projects were presented in May 1996
at the 18th Conference on Severe Local Storms, the American
Meteorological Society, in San Francisco.
Related information on the Internet
NOAA Storm Prediction Center
Tornado and Storm Research Organisation
Tornado
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