Geophysical Research Letters (Apr 2023)
How Are Tornadic Supercell Soundings Significantly Different From Nearby Baseline Environments?
Abstract
Abstract This study explores how tornadic supercell soundings significantly differ from the same‐location and same‐hour baseline environment soundings, sampled from the days prior to or following the event. Permutation testing is used to identify whether sounding‐derived parameters mixed‐layer convective available potential energy and 0–1 km storm‐relative helicity are significantly different between the tornadic and baseline environment. Typically, in an environment with marginal values of certain key environmental parameters, anomalous values of those environmental parameters are more strongly associated with supercell tornadoes. Furthermore, many tornadic events already exhibit environmental conditions favorable for tornadic supercells a day prior to the event itself. Generally, supercell tornadoes that occur during typical peak tornadic activity time frames are easier to distinguish from baseline (non‐tornadic) environments compared to those occurring in other time frames. Spatiotemporal variations of distinguishability between tornadic and baseline environmental parameters add complexity to traditional parameter‐based fixed threshold forecasting.
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