An observational examination of long-lived supercells. Part II: Environmental conditions and forecasting

被引:50
作者
Bunkers, Matthew J.
Johnson, Jeffrey S.
Czepyha, Lee J.
Grzywacz, Jason M.
Klimowski, Brian A.
Hjelmfelt, Mark R.
机构
[1] Natl Weather Serv, NOAA, Rapid City, SD 57701 USA
[2] Natl Weather Serv, NOAA, Dodge City, KS USA
[3] Natl Weather Serv, NOAA, Bellemont, AR USA
[4] S Dakota Sch Mines & Technol, Rapid City, SD USA
关键词
D O I
10.1175/WAF952.1
中图分类号
P4 [大气科学(气象学)];
学科分类号
0706 ; 070601 ;
摘要
The local and larger-scale environments of 184 long-lived supercell events (containing one or more supercells with lifetimes >= 4 h; see Part I of this paper) are investigated and subsequently compared with those from 137 moderate-lived events (average supercell lifetime 2-4 h) and 119 short-lived events (average supercell lifetime <= 2 h) to better anticipate supercell longevity in the operational setting. Consistent with many previous studies, long-lived supercells occur in environments with much stronger 0-8-km bulk wind shear than what is observed for short-lived supercells; this strong shear leads to significant storm-relative winds in the mid-to upper levels for the longest-lived supercells. Additionally, the bulk Richardson number falls into a relatively narrow range for the longest-lived supercells-ranging mostly from 5 to 45. The mesoscale to synoptic-scale environment can also predispose a supercell to be long or short lived, somewhat independent of the local environment. For example, long-lived supercells may occur when supercells travel within a broad warm sector or else in close proximity to mesoscale or larger-scale boundaries (e. g., along or near a warm front, an old outflow boundary, or a moisture/buoyancy axis), even if the deep-layer shear is suboptimal. By way of contrast, strong atmospheric forcing can result in linear convection (and thus shorter-lived supercells) in a strongly sheared environment that would otherwise favor discrete, long-lived supercells.
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页码:689 / 714
页数:26
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