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Comparison of Observed Conditions with Stability Indices

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Presentation on theme: "Comparison of Observed Conditions with Stability Indices"— Presentation transcript:

1 Comparison of Observed Conditions with Stability Indices
LT Cathy McDougall 20 March 2001

2 Introduction The forecasting of thunderstorms and related phenomena (hail, tornadoes, strong winds, heavy rain) is based primarily on the concepts of: a) conditional instability. b) convective instability. c) forced lifting of air near the surface.

3 Conditional Instability
the lapse-rate definition (i.e., the environmental lapse rate lies between the dry- and the moist- adiabatic lapse rates) d >  > s d = -9.8 C/km s = (-7 +/- 3) C/km the available-energy definition (i.e., a parcel possesses positive buoyant energy) + > - real latent instability - < + pseudo latent instability - only latent stability saturated parcel = instability unsaturated parcel = must evaluate CAPE and CIN

4 Stability and Instability Indices
Showalter Index SI = T500 - Tp500 >= 3 No convective rain 1 to 3 Showers likely -2 to 1 Thunderstorms probable <= -3 Tornadoes probable K Index K=(T850 - T500) + Td850 - (T700 - Td700 ) Mod K = (aveTsfc T500) + aveTdsfc (T700 - Td700 ) K THUNDERSTORM PROBABILITY >

5 Instability Indices (Continued)
Total Totals Index TT = T Td T500 >44 Thunderstorms >50 Thunderstorms with large hail and tornadoes. SWEAT Index 12D +20(TT-49) + 2v8 + v (S+0.2) < 272: unlikely 273 to 299: general storms; slight risk of severe storms 300 to 400: storms approaching severe limits; moderate risk of severe storms 401 to 600: few severe storms with isolated tornadoes; strong risk 601 to 800: scattered tornadoes; high risk

6 Convective Instability
Convective instability was originally defined by Rossby (1932) to be when one of the three following equivalent conditions is met over a layer of the atmosphere: (1) the lapse rate of wet-bulb temperature (Tw) exceeds the moist-adiabatic lapse rate (s) (2) the equivalent potential temperature (e) decreases with height, or (3) the wet-bulb potential temperature (w) decreases with height.

7 THUNDERSTORM EVENT 12 February 2001 at 4Z
Closest Sounding to the event was 12FEB01, 00Z

8

9 Instability Indices from 12/00Z
Showalter Index using -7 = Thunderstorms probable Showalter Index using Skew T= No convective rain Showalter Index using -4 = Tornadoes probable KIndex = % probability of Thunderstorms ModKIndex = % probability of Thunderstorms TTIndex = Groups of tornadoes are feared - ref 1 Severe Weather Probability Moderate - ref 2 SWEAT = Usefulness low because < 250

10 Comparison with Stable Atmospheric Conditions
Sounding 05 Feb 2001 18 Z Fog

11 In contrast with Thunderstorm case Theta E increases with height
in the lower levels indicating stability (no convective Instability).

12 Instability Indices from 05/18Z
Showalter Index using -7 = No convective rain Showalter Index using Skew T= No convective rain Showalter Index using -4 = No convective rain KIndex = % probability of Thunderstorms ModKIndex = % probability of Thunderstorms TTIndex = Severe Weather Probability unlikely SWEAT =No wind data available

13 Conclusions Stability indices are only a forecasting tool.
Don’t depend on a single index. Severe weather indices only indicate the potential for convection. Determination of the convective instability using e seemed to be a better indicator in our region.


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