Composite Analysis of Cool-Season Florida Tornado Outbreaks

This study presents a multiscale environmental analysis of 33 Florida tornado (1979–2016) and 29 null events (2003–2019). A tornado event was defined as ≥ 4 tornadoes within a 24-h period during December–May, which was chosen to eliminate events associated with tropical cyclones. Null events were de...

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Main Authors: Klepatzki, Jonathon P., Milrad, Shawn M.
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: E-Journals of Meteorology 2020
Subjects:
Online Access:https://ejssm.com/ojs/index.php/site/article/view/75
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spelling ftessm:oai:ojs2.ejssm.com:article/75 2023-08-27T04:08:00+02:00 Composite Analysis of Cool-Season Florida Tornado Outbreaks Klepatzki, Jonathon P. Milrad, Shawn M. 2020-02-24 application/pdf https://ejssm.com/ojs/index.php/site/article/view/75 eng eng E-Journals of Meteorology https://ejssm.com/ojs/index.php/site/article/view/75/73 https://ejssm.com/ojs/index.php/site/article/view/75 https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0 E-Journal of Severe Storms Meteorology; Vol. 15 No. 1 (2020); 1-34 1559-5404 info:eu-repo/semantics/article info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersion Peer-Reviewed Article 2020 ftessm 2023-08-09T13:42:58Z This study presents a multiscale environmental analysis of 33 Florida tornado (1979–2016) and 29 null events (2003–2019). A tornado event was defined as ≥ 4 tornadoes within a 24-h period during December–May, which was chosen to eliminate events associated with tropical cyclones. Null events were defined as periods when the NOAA Storm Prediction Center had tornado outlook probabilities ≥ 5% over any part of Florida, but < 4 tornadoes occurred in 24 h. Central Florida experienced the largest number of tornado events, while most null events occurred in the Florida Panhandle. Tornado events occurred slightly more frequently during El Niño and negative Arctic Oscillation, in contrast to cool-season events elsewhere in the United States. Using the North American Regional Reanalysis, a composite synoptic analysis showed that compared to null events, tornado events were associated with a coupled divergent jet streak region, a more amplified anomalous mid-tropospheric trough, a surface cyclone located farther south (Gulf of Mexico vs. Tennessee Valley), and larger equivalent potential temperature anomalies. While both event sets featured high-shear, low-CAPE environments that are typical of southeast United States tornado events, tornado events exhibited larger storm-relative helicity and 0–6-km vertical wind shear. Overall, results suggest that synoptic pattern recognition techniques and mesoscale parameter spaces can help forecasters in identifying potential Florida tornado events. Article in Journal/Newspaper Arctic E-Journal of Severe Storms Meteorology (E-Journals of Meteorology, Inc.) Arctic
institution Open Polar
collection E-Journal of Severe Storms Meteorology (E-Journals of Meteorology, Inc.)
op_collection_id ftessm
language English
description This study presents a multiscale environmental analysis of 33 Florida tornado (1979–2016) and 29 null events (2003–2019). A tornado event was defined as ≥ 4 tornadoes within a 24-h period during December–May, which was chosen to eliminate events associated with tropical cyclones. Null events were defined as periods when the NOAA Storm Prediction Center had tornado outlook probabilities ≥ 5% over any part of Florida, but < 4 tornadoes occurred in 24 h. Central Florida experienced the largest number of tornado events, while most null events occurred in the Florida Panhandle. Tornado events occurred slightly more frequently during El Niño and negative Arctic Oscillation, in contrast to cool-season events elsewhere in the United States. Using the North American Regional Reanalysis, a composite synoptic analysis showed that compared to null events, tornado events were associated with a coupled divergent jet streak region, a more amplified anomalous mid-tropospheric trough, a surface cyclone located farther south (Gulf of Mexico vs. Tennessee Valley), and larger equivalent potential temperature anomalies. While both event sets featured high-shear, low-CAPE environments that are typical of southeast United States tornado events, tornado events exhibited larger storm-relative helicity and 0–6-km vertical wind shear. Overall, results suggest that synoptic pattern recognition techniques and mesoscale parameter spaces can help forecasters in identifying potential Florida tornado events.
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Klepatzki, Jonathon P.
Milrad, Shawn M.
spellingShingle Klepatzki, Jonathon P.
Milrad, Shawn M.
Composite Analysis of Cool-Season Florida Tornado Outbreaks
author_facet Klepatzki, Jonathon P.
Milrad, Shawn M.
author_sort Klepatzki, Jonathon P.
title Composite Analysis of Cool-Season Florida Tornado Outbreaks
title_short Composite Analysis of Cool-Season Florida Tornado Outbreaks
title_full Composite Analysis of Cool-Season Florida Tornado Outbreaks
title_fullStr Composite Analysis of Cool-Season Florida Tornado Outbreaks
title_full_unstemmed Composite Analysis of Cool-Season Florida Tornado Outbreaks
title_sort composite analysis of cool-season florida tornado outbreaks
publisher E-Journals of Meteorology
publishDate 2020
url https://ejssm.com/ojs/index.php/site/article/view/75
geographic Arctic
geographic_facet Arctic
genre Arctic
genre_facet Arctic
op_source E-Journal of Severe Storms Meteorology; Vol. 15 No. 1 (2020); 1-34
1559-5404
op_relation https://ejssm.com/ojs/index.php/site/article/view/75/73
https://ejssm.com/ojs/index.php/site/article/view/75
op_rights https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0
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