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Challenges in Convective Storm Prediction for the Coastal-Urban New York City-Long Island Brian A. Colle 1, Kelly Lombardo 2, John Murray 3, and Harrison.

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Presentation on theme: "Challenges in Convective Storm Prediction for the Coastal-Urban New York City-Long Island Brian A. Colle 1, Kelly Lombardo 2, John Murray 3, and Harrison."— Presentation transcript:

1 Challenges in Convective Storm Prediction for the Coastal-Urban New York City-Long Island Brian A. Colle 1, Kelly Lombardo 2, John Murray 3, and Harrison Li 4 1 School of Marine and Atmospheric Sciences Stony Brook University – SUNY 2 Department of Marine Sciences University of Connecticut 3 NYC NOAA-National Weather Service 4 Harvard University NOAA Photo: 7 July 1976

2 Outline Motivation: Northeast US convective storm climatology and coastal tornadoes. NYC early AM EF2 tornado 7 August 2007. Decay versus non-decay quasi-linear convective systems near the SNE coast. Future changes in convective frequency using CMIP5 data and linear discriminate analysis (LDA).

3 Spatial Distribution of Northeast U.S. Convective Storms During the Warm Season (1996-2007) (Murray and Colle MWR 2011) Storm frequency per 15-min interval (shaded in percent) for a composite reflectivity 45 dBZ and cloud-to-ground lightning from April through September of 1996–2007. Radar Frequency > 45 dBZ (in percent) Lightning Frequency (per km 2 ) Composite Reflectivity Cloud to Ground Lightning X X

4 3 2 1 4 5 54 1 2 3 45 dBZ Frequency per Warm Season for 5 Boxes Across Northeast U.S.

5 Tornado Climatology for NYC and Long Island (1950-2010): Tornado Climatology for NYC and Long Island (1950-2010): Colle et al. (2012) UTC

6 8 August 2007 NYC EF2 Tornado 1022-1050 UTC (Colle et al. 2012) New York Daily News * * * * * * * * 1 2 Brooklyn Staten Is.

7 3: 1300Z 8/7 4: 1600Z 8/7 5: 2300Z 8/77:1000Z 8/86: 0600Z 8/8 3 4 67 1 2 0600Z 8/7 1300Z 8/7 1000Z 8/8 August 7-8 2007 Storm Reports

8 0300 UTC 8 August 2007 Low-mid level frontogenetical forcing and ascent increases during the evening hours over PA 950 winds, thetaE, Frontogenesis 700 mb Q-vector K/100km/3hr *10 -1

9 400 hPa 600 hPa 800 hPa Pittsburgh, PA 7 August 1200 UTC 7 August 1200 UTC 8 August 1200 UTC 6 August 1200 UTC 500 Z, 800:600 lpse X

10 EML, Rapid Low-level Destabilization, and Increasing Shear in a Few Hours 0500 UTC 8 Aug 0830 UTC 8 Aug RUC 0300 UTC vs 0900 UTC 03Z03Z 1500 J/kg EWR ACARS

11 Role of Mesoscale Boundaries and Surface Circulation Surface: 1000 UTC 8 Aug 2007 1013 UTC 8 Aug 2007: DIX radar X

12 Benefit of TDWR Radar DIX 88-D 1030 UTC TJFK 1030 UTC

13 Evolution of Linear Convective Systems Near the Coast MAINTAIN 6/1/02 DECAY 7/23/02 Warm Season Linear Events (2002-2007) Categories: DECAY (32 cases): Decays at the coast SLOW DECAY (19 cases): Decay from coast to 100 km offshore. MAINTAIN (9 cases): Little change in linear system at least 100 km offshore. definition for decay: Clear weakening trend in the line for at least 30 minutes. For most cases, the continuous line became 50 dBZ. Use coastal point at ~0.75 o ahead of the center of the convective line to construct NARR composite (closest 3-h period before decay time).` See Lombardo and Colle (2012;2013) for Climo and WRF process study Maintain: 5/31/02 Decay: 7/23/02

14 Comparisons of MUCAPE (for parcel in lowest 180 hPa) and 0-3 km Shear max min 75% 25% DECAY SLOW DECAY MAINTAIN

15 900-800 hPa Frontogenesis and 900 hPa Temp Adv DECAY SLOW DECAY MAINTAIN SLOW DECAY MAINTAIN

16 Changes in April-Sept Days With Environments Favoring Convective Storms Using Linear Discriminate Analysis and CMIP5 RCP8.5 (Li and Colle 2016) Use: PW 58 : Daily precipitable water using 850, 700, 500 hPa TDIFF 58 :Daily temp(850 hPa) – temp (500 hPa)  =daily average omega 500 and 700 hPa R^2 = 0.43 versus convective storm days validated using radar Li and Colle (2014) using 88D radar and NARR: 8.20 × 10 -5 (CAPESHEAR) + 0.0589(PRWTR) – 5.94(OMEGA) > 2.35 Li And Colle 2014: 1996-2007 used to train LDA

17 Historical Annual Storm Days Using 7 CMIP5 Models and NARR/CFSR Average PW 58 vs Storm Days  vs Storm Days

18 Future Annual Convective Environment Days and PW 58 Using 7 CMIP5 Future Storm Env. Days PW 58 Changes

19 Region 1 (SW PA) Region 2 (E LI) Future Warm Season Convective Environment Days (SW PA vs E Long Island)

20 Average CMIP5 Changes (2066-2095 minus 1976-2005) PW58 change (percent change shaded)  change (shaded and contoured) Vertical shear 500-850hPa percent change

21 Summary There is a diurnal progression of convective storm frequency from the interior NE (early afternoon) to the coastal ocean (at night). There is a diurnal progression of convective storm frequency from the interior NE (early afternoon) to the coastal ocean (at night). NYC-Long Island tornadoes are most frequent during late summer (August) and can occur from very early AM to early evening (0900-0000 UTC). NYC-Long Island tornadoes are most frequent during late summer (August) and can occur from very early AM to early evening (0900-0000 UTC). 7-8 August 2007 NYC tornado occurred along a mesoscale boundary, with destabilization from an EML + diabatic cooling, a nose of higher thetaE along the coast, and a LLJ. 7-8 August 2007 NYC tornado occurred along a mesoscale boundary, with destabilization from an EML + diabatic cooling, a nose of higher thetaE along the coast, and a LLJ. Using a statistical approach on daily CMIP5 data, there is a 20-40% increase in convective storm frequency over the NE. Large moisture uncertainty and did not include CIN. Using a statistical approach on daily CMIP5 data, there is a 20-40% increase in convective storm frequency over the NE. Large moisture uncertainty and did not include CIN.


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