Brett Roberts
EF5
A few miscellaneous observations and comments, without trying to take a hard stance as to the exact failure mode on Wednesday:
*I don't really recall 2007-03-28 displaying prominently S-shaped hodographs on forecast or observed soundings. If anything, there may have been some concern over backing in the upper troposphere, but not around 700 mb as was observed this week. For example, the 2007-03-29 00z DDC sounding shows nice veering up to 500 mb. Moreover, barbs on the 500 mb chart appear uniformly more veered and stronger than on the 700 mb chart; this, too, differs significantly from the analyses on Wednesday evening.
*Personally, like Jeff, I can't recall any great tornado days -- or even good structure days -- that I've chased where a major weakness around 700-800 mb yields the nasty S-shape we saw on Wednesday. However, that's just anecdotal, and it's only something I tend to notice if it's fairly severe -- which it was on Wednesday, in my opinion, especially on the RAP the day of the event.
*Despite the jumbled VPPGF distribution that can be inferred for updrafts in Wednesday's environment (due to the S-shape), it seemed like all the supercells turned well to the right of the mean wind. On Wednesday morning, I was very concerned that 500 mb flow was verifying more meridional than expected, which could carry storms quickly across the boundary unless they were right-movers. Despite mid-level flow that was nearly SSW, though, the storms trained in a WSW-ENE fashion from FDR to LAW all day.
*Regarding the issue of warm mid-level temperatures: isn't CINH integrated only from the surface to the LFC on most model output? In that case, it is theoretically possible for reduced (or negative) buoyancy to play a major role in an environment characterized by minimal or zero CINH. The 00z FWD sounding exemplifies this well. However, I don't believe it was very representative of the supercell environment 100 mi. to the NW. I noticed some model soundings with a weaker version of the same warm nose for areas like LAW-OKC, but as you dropped farther SW (especially into NW TX), it eroded almost completely by late afternoon. Even so, the southern dryline storms that initiated late struggled a lot.
*I don't really recall 2007-03-28 displaying prominently S-shaped hodographs on forecast or observed soundings. If anything, there may have been some concern over backing in the upper troposphere, but not around 700 mb as was observed this week. For example, the 2007-03-29 00z DDC sounding shows nice veering up to 500 mb. Moreover, barbs on the 500 mb chart appear uniformly more veered and stronger than on the 700 mb chart; this, too, differs significantly from the analyses on Wednesday evening.
*Personally, like Jeff, I can't recall any great tornado days -- or even good structure days -- that I've chased where a major weakness around 700-800 mb yields the nasty S-shape we saw on Wednesday. However, that's just anecdotal, and it's only something I tend to notice if it's fairly severe -- which it was on Wednesday, in my opinion, especially on the RAP the day of the event.
*Despite the jumbled VPPGF distribution that can be inferred for updrafts in Wednesday's environment (due to the S-shape), it seemed like all the supercells turned well to the right of the mean wind. On Wednesday morning, I was very concerned that 500 mb flow was verifying more meridional than expected, which could carry storms quickly across the boundary unless they were right-movers. Despite mid-level flow that was nearly SSW, though, the storms trained in a WSW-ENE fashion from FDR to LAW all day.
*Regarding the issue of warm mid-level temperatures: isn't CINH integrated only from the surface to the LFC on most model output? In that case, it is theoretically possible for reduced (or negative) buoyancy to play a major role in an environment characterized by minimal or zero CINH. The 00z FWD sounding exemplifies this well. However, I don't believe it was very representative of the supercell environment 100 mi. to the NW. I noticed some model soundings with a weaker version of the same warm nose for areas like LAW-OKC, but as you dropped farther SW (especially into NW TX), it eroded almost completely by late afternoon. Even so, the southern dryline storms that initiated late struggled a lot.