David Williams
EF4
These questions have been repo status from the miscellaneous discussion for the same day.
So I was anticipating storms to fire off the dryline in eastern Oklahoma. My chase partner and I waited forever for the dryline to make its way east. Then, some things happened that I don't entirely understand, and I was hoping to get some clarification on:
1. The dryline was moving (I think) slower than anticipated across OK. I thought it was going to be the firing mechanism for storms that developed on far eastern OK and pushed into AR. Why was the dryline moving so slow? Now my guess is that it ran into so much deep moisture with such a stout cap that it was having difficulty making progress; however, I haven't been able to find soundings from yesterday to see if the moisture was reaching 5000 ft. (Interestingly enough, I learned about drylines being slowed by deep moisture from Tim Vs article "Dryline Magic" that I read on Saturday).
2. The first storm to fire off the dryline and track into OK was way south on the on the TX border near Sherman. This guy started looking all big and bad, but after a while I noticed that he had halted the dryline, decoupling himself from it and moving away NE. So, why did he stop the dryline? And, why did he and the small severe storm to the north die out once they left the dryline?
3. As the dryling tracked closer, I was watching towers go up and die all over the place. Was this due to the strength of the cap? Storms being sheared off? The slow momentum of the dryling? Or, another reason?
4. The only place where the dryline kept advancing was over northern OK. Hark! Two cells are produced here, both go severe quickly, and one produces the Quapaw and Baxter tornadoes. So, were these storm able to go severe quickly and produce the tornadoes because they were anchored on the dryline?
5. If the dryline did make it into AR, would we have seen some other crazy storms/tornadoes especially in the HIGH Risk area?
Thanks for any feedback!
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So I was anticipating storms to fire off the dryline in eastern Oklahoma. My chase partner and I waited forever for the dryline to make its way east. Then, some things happened that I don't entirely understand, and I was hoping to get some clarification on:
1. The dryline was moving (I think) slower than anticipated across OK. I thought it was going to be the firing mechanism for storms that developed on far eastern OK and pushed into AR. Why was the dryline moving so slow? Now my guess is that it ran into so much deep moisture with such a stout cap that it was having difficulty making progress; however, I haven't been able to find soundings from yesterday to see if the moisture was reaching 5000 ft. (Interestingly enough, I learned about drylines being slowed by deep moisture from Tim Vs article "Dryline Magic" that I read on Saturday).
2. The first storm to fire off the dryline and track into OK was way south on the on the TX border near Sherman. This guy started looking all big and bad, but after a while I noticed that he had halted the dryline, decoupling himself from it and moving away NE. So, why did he stop the dryline? And, why did he and the small severe storm to the north die out once they left the dryline?
3. As the dryling tracked closer, I was watching towers go up and die all over the place. Was this due to the strength of the cap? Storms being sheared off? The slow momentum of the dryling? Or, another reason?
4. The only place where the dryline kept advancing was over northern OK. Hark! Two cells are produced here, both go severe quickly, and one produces the Quapaw and Baxter tornadoes. So, were these storm able to go severe quickly and produce the tornadoes because they were anchored on the dryline?
5. If the dryline did make it into AR, would we have seen some other crazy storms/tornadoes especially in the HIGH Risk area?
Thanks for any feedback!
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