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Warm-Season Elevated Thunderstorms with Heavy Rainfall: A Composite Study. Dr. Scott M. Rochette SUNY Brockport. Basis of Presentation. Background Review Methodology of Composite Study Kinematic and Thermodynamic Fields Stability and Moisture Fields Vertical Profiles and Hodographs
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Warm-Season Elevated Thunderstorms with Heavy Rainfall: A Composite Study Dr. Scott M. Rochette SUNY Brockport
Basis of Presentation • Background Review • Methodology of Composite Study • Kinematic and Thermodynamic Fields • Stability and Moisture Fields • Vertical Profiles and Hodographs • Correlations • Conceptual Model • Summary
Elevated Thunderstorms 1(Colman 1990) • An elevated thunderstorm occurs above a frontal inversion • Isolated from surface diabatic effects • Colman’s criteria • observation must lie on the cold side of an analyzed front, showing a clear contrast in temperature, dew point, and wind • station’s temperature, dew point, and wind must be qualitatively similar to immediately surrounding values • surface air on warm side of analyzed front must have higher e than air on cold side
Elevated Thunderstorms 2(Colman 1990) • Cold-sector MCSs generally fit Maddox frontal or meso-high type flash flood scenarios • Elevated thunderstorms can occur during any time of year • usually associated with heavy rain/snow or hail • nearly all winter-season thunderstorms over the U.S. east of the Rockies (excluding Florida) are elevated
Elevated Thunderstorm Climatology 1 • Climatology of elevated thunderstorms reveals bimodal variation • primary maximum in April • secondary maximum in September (Colman 1990)
Elevated Thunderstorm Climatology 2 (Colman 1990)
Elevated Thunderstorm Climatology 3 (Colman 1990)
Max-e CAPE Use max-e CAPE when lifting is at/above frontal zone (stable PBL)
Elevated Convective Instability 1 • Convectively stable PBL • eincreases w/height • Convective environment insulated from local surface diabatic effects • Convective instability above frontal zone • edecreases w/height • Vertical profile helpful for diagnosis
Elevated Convective Instability 2 (Trier and Parsons 1993)
Composite Study of WSElevated Thunderstorms 1 • 21 Cases • 35 Events • Some occurred over multiple time periods • 4 in (24 h)-1 of rain over (100 km x 100 km) area • Diagnostic fields computed for each event • Thermodynamic • Kinematic • Stability • Moisture • Pre-convective environment ( 4 h of 0000/1200 UTC)
Composite Study of WSElevated Thunderstorms 2 • MCS centroid identified for each event • Initiation point • Point of most intense convection • 11 x 11 grid defined wrt centroid • x = 190.5 km • Grid computed for each parameter/event • Composite fields created by averaging objectively analyzed fields for individual parameters • Storm-relative composites • Geography shows spatial orientation/relative magnitudes • Not meant to signify specific geographic location