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Going to Extremes

From twisters on the Great Plains to massive rainstorms in the Midwest, NCAR scientists and colleagues study some of the wildest weather in person. By taking sophisticated instruments close to the action, they gather observations to help understand the physical properties, from tiny to grand scale, that drive severe weather.

Supercells—the powerful thunderstorms that rumble across the central United States for hours at a time, spawning severe weather along the way—are a natural target for field study. Storm researchers at NCAR have joined colleagues elsewhere to send aircraft in and near thunderstorms while deploying portable radars and other observing tools at ground level.

NCAR field work has focused on some of the most damaging phenomena spun out by severe storms, including:

Tornadoes
In the mid-1990s, NCAR took part in the Verification of the Origins of Rotation in Tornadoes Experiment (VORTEX), which trekked across the Great Plains to study how tornadoes form. Since then, NCAR has collaborated on improvements to Doppler on Wheels, a set of truck-mounted radars. The radars help profile hurricanes as well as tornadoes.

Lightning
During the 1980s and 1990s, NCAR cloud physicists carried out a unique set of expeditions that sent a sailplane in and near developing thunderstorms to analyze electrical fields and other phenomena. Another project, called STERAO (Stratosphere-Troposphere Experiments: Radiation, Aerosols, and Ozone), brought lightning and air-chemistry experts together to examine lightning and its production of nitrogen oxides, a chemical precursor to ozone. In 2000, the Severe Thunderstorm Electrification and Precipitation Study (STEPS) brought storm-chasing vehicles, radars, and an armor-protected research aircraft to the High Plains of Colorado and Kansas, where they examined low-precipitation supercells and the types of lightning they produce. STEPS and other field studies have confirmed that lightning frequency and type can shift abruptly in a thunderstorm, often at the same time as rain or hail intensifies.

Heavy rain and flooding
Several field studies have focused on heavy rain from thunderstorms that roam the central and eastern U.S. The International H2O Project (IHOP2002) studied the effect of sharp contrasts in water vapor in setting off thunderstorms and heavy rainfall across the southern Great Plains. A year later, the Bow Echo and MCS Experiment (BAMEX) analyzed mesoscale convective systems, which can cover an area as big as a midwestern state and persist for many hours. BAMEX also investigated the swaths of high wind that descend from some of these huge convective systems. It took an array of tools to study how rainfall varies across a region, or one storm, and assess the life cycle of long-lived storm episodes that march across the United States over several days. Studies such as BAMEX rely increasingly on aircraft, portable radars, and mobile observing systems to get much-needed data in detail.

 

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