Bill Schintler
EF4
Arguably, the best chasing storm today in KS/OK was that which fired just west of Dodge City around 5-5:30 PM while producing a left-split early in its life cycle, and then tracked east-southeast to just north of Greensburg (where it produced a brief tornado), and then towards Pratt, by which time it rapidly weakened and fell apart. What happened to this storm to cause such a rapid demise? A few observations of my own:
1) The storm crossed over to the north side of the front/OFB west of Greensburg, where the capping inversion was strong.
2) More importantly, the LLJ was virtually non-existent at that time and location – so if the inflow-portion of the storm crossed over into the cooler air, there was nothing above the boundary layer to sustain it.
Thoughts? - bill
1) The storm crossed over to the north side of the front/OFB west of Greensburg, where the capping inversion was strong.
2) More importantly, the LLJ was virtually non-existent at that time and location – so if the inflow-portion of the storm crossed over into the cooler air, there was nothing above the boundary layer to sustain it.
Thoughts? - bill