Darren Lo
EF0
- Joined
- Feb 25, 2012
- Messages
- 39
I'm curious if there is a visual characteristic or other direct observational cue that distinguishes between elevated storms and those which are surface-based or rooted in the boundary layer. I know of a few factors that suggest a storm is elevated, although they are not foolproof and are not directly based on immediate observation (i.e. require a bit of interpretation):
1. The storm base is significantly higher than would be suggested by the surface-based LCL implied by surface obs nearby in the inflow sector. (Could go wrong if surface parcels are much different from the average parcel in the effective inflow layer, e.g. if there is a very shallow moist layer at the surface.)
2. There is reason to suspect the presence of a temperature inversion (storms late at night or early in the morning, storms on the cold side of a front...)
3. Convection initiated by strong upper lift might start off elevated before eventually becoming surface-based (if it ever does).
So what I'm asking is, is there a more direct way to just look at a storm and determine if it's elevated or not?
1. The storm base is significantly higher than would be suggested by the surface-based LCL implied by surface obs nearby in the inflow sector. (Could go wrong if surface parcels are much different from the average parcel in the effective inflow layer, e.g. if there is a very shallow moist layer at the surface.)
2. There is reason to suspect the presence of a temperature inversion (storms late at night or early in the morning, storms on the cold side of a front...)
3. Convection initiated by strong upper lift might start off elevated before eventually becoming surface-based (if it ever does).
So what I'm asking is, is there a more direct way to just look at a storm and determine if it's elevated or not?