May 22 2008
Tornado Outbreak
Under Construction(last updated
July 7 2008 1120 UTC)
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Related items of
interest
Historical Tornado Cases
for the Cheyenne Warning Area
Detailed
Tornado Cases for the Cheyenne Warning Area
Historical Tornado Cases
for the Boulder Warning Area
Historical Tornado Cases for
the United States
Elevated Mixed
Layer
Elevated
Heating
Overview of Events
On May 22-23, 2008, a favorable pattern for
severe thunderstorms developed for the high plains, front range and
eastern slopes of the Rockies. Slow moving meridional troughs
have historically provided some of the more notable severe
weather outbreaks for this region. Examples include
April 23
1960 and
June
14-17 1965.
Several tornadic storms occurred on
May 22,
and a few of these produced large, long-lived tornadoes. The method of
counting tornadoes has varied over the decades. Also, many more
tornadoes are spotted since the advent of storms chasing. These days,
some eager storm chasers are reporting every little dust-whirl that
remotely looks like a tornado. Also, NWS verification has also led to
an increase in tornado reports since the early 1990s. Storm chasing and
NWS verification have undoutbedly led to an explosion in the number of
tornado reports since the early 1990s. Many of these are the weaker
tornadoes(or in some cases dust whirls) since the much larger
tornadoes were often too obvious to be overlooked. To me, the longevity
and quality of individual tornadoes have more meaning than the actual
number of tornado touchdowns. For example, one F4, mile-wide tornado
that stays on the ground for 50 miles obviously is much more
significant than 50 tiny, weak tornadoes that stay on the ground for 30
seconds and do little damage. In the 1950s, individual paths of
tornadoes tended to be much shorter because detailed storm surveys were
usually not done. In reality, these continuous tracks were oftentimes a
family of tornadoes, with breaks in between the individual tornadoes.
Also, one tornado on the ground continuously for 50 miles obviously
does more damage on average than a family of 10 tornadoes along the
exact same path. The tornado on March 18, 1925 is officially listed an
one continuous tornado for 234 miles that killed 695 people.
Obviously this was a
catastrophic
tornado day in our history.
This severe weather episode was well
forecasted by the ECMWF model. This model indicated that a deep,
slow moving, meridional trough would approach the high plains on May
22-23. It also predicted a deep trough over New England, with an associated
surface front behind this system through the lower midwest into northeast
Kansas, southwest Nebraska and eastern Wyoming. The ECMWF did an excellent
job with these features well in advance. The 144 hr ECMWF showed a
stationary front through northern Kansas and southern Nebraska, with strong
upslope flow across western Nebraska and eastern Wyoming. On May 17, I
expressed my
thoughts
about the
severe
weather pattern.
A tornado watch was
issued by the storm prediction center at 1725 UTC (1125 am MDT) for much of
northeast Colorado and part of southeast Wyoming.
Towering cumulus clouds developed southeast
of Denver International Airport around 16 UTC on May 22. By 1635 UTC, 45
dbz echoes were noted at 23,000 ft about 3 miles northeast of the airport.
By 1657 UTC, a 61 dbz echo was located 14 miles north of Denver at
21,000ft. The first 50 dbz on the lowest slice occurred at 1648 UTC. The first
60 dbz echo on the lowest slice was noted 5 miles west-southwest of Hudson at
1652 UTC. By 1701 UTC there was a 62 dbz echo up to 26,000ft and 47
dbz echo up to 32,000ft. The storm was severe at this point. At 1705 UTC, the
storm had 63-66 dbz echoes northwest and west of Hudson at the lowest
slice.
Radar loops for the Colorado part of this
tornado outbreak will be coming soon.
It is well known that thunderstorms tend to
develop along the front range earlier than on the low plains. This is because
capping tends to be weaker due to elevated heating, and lower moisture content
of the air allows for a rapid warmup to the convective temperature by
local noon. Also, the Laramie Ridge is above the traditional capping level. But
convection began before local noon on this day. The first tornado
report was east of Platteville at 1726 UTC. The tornado was already doing
damage by 1726 UTC and was reported to be 1/2 mile wide at 1727 UTC. This
tornado became
very
large and
damaging and continued for 34 miles to west of Wellington, CO through
1812 UTC. Very large hail up to baseball size occurred along and
west of the tornado path. The tornado moved generally to the
north-northwest at 35 to 40 mph. The elapsed time between the first 50
dbz echo on the .5 deg slice from the Denver radar and initial tornado
damage was 37 minutes!!
The storm weakened a little as it moved
northwest of Wellington, CO, but then strengthened and accelerated as it passed
east of Virginia Dale. This storm produced a 2nd tornado from 1857 UTC
to 1935 UTC. There may have been a break in the damage northwest of
Overlook Rd after 1922 UTC. This tornado was accompanied by quarter to
golfball sized hail. It is unclear whether the
tornado
that hit Laramie was a 3rd tornado from the same supercell or whether
the 2nd tornado continued into Laramie. The tornado in the picture looks very
small. It is more probable that the tornado shrunk in size just before
entering the eastern edge of Laramie. The tornadic storm continued
well northwest of Laramie. Radar indicated another possible tornado
7 miles north of Harper, WY at 2017 UTC.
Since I have a strong interest in high
elevation severe weather, and since this was a particularly rare and exceptional
tornado event on the high terrain, I decided to independently document the
Wyoming part of the tornado outbreak. This was accomplished using the internet
white
pages along with
live maps. But when I first started this
task, I had no names to work with. So I ordered a phone book for Cheyenne,
WY called the "Country Cowboy". I started with the H's, and after about 5
minutes I found the name Paul Hanselmann on Ramshorn Road. Ramshorn Road
was close to the tornado path. So I called Paul Hanselmann. This
immediately paid off as his house was unfortunately hit by the
tornado. He gave me 2 other names and then those people referred me to
others. So information piled up quickly. I want to thank all
those who
took the time to share information over the phone.
The 1st and strongest Albany county
tornado touched down about 0.4 miles east of the intersection of
Albany, Larimer and Laramie counties, or about 3/4 mile west of
Harriman road along the state line(elevation 7500 ft) at 1857 UTC (1257
pm MDT). I used radar to determine the exact times as this is usually
the most accurate method. Prior to the tornado, dense fog shrouded
the eastern slopes of the Laramie mountains, with
visibilities almost zero at the Walno residence near the
tri-county border. Wylie Walno arrived home just
before the storm hit the area. He said that the visibility
suddenly jumped from near zero to unlimited as
the storm passed to his north. He could see low-hanging
clouds pass by. Golfball sized hail also occurred at the Walno
residence. The first signs of tornado damage occurred at the residence
of Richard Miller. Two trees on his property were downed and his garage
door was bent. Half dollar sized hail also occurred there. Immediately
to the northwest, 20 ponderosa pine trees were downed on the Claire
Hoover farm as the tornado passed between the house and a
barn. Then the tornado toppled 4 more trees on Belinda Scott's
property. A few trees were downed on Wylie Walno's property.
Storm relative
velocity loop (1845 to 1934 UTC)
Reflectivity loop (1845 to 1930
UTC)
Fairly extensive tree damage occurred just
northwest of the initial touchdown location as the tornado widened.
Peter Hansen reported to me that the tornado downed trees for several
miles on his property. Tim Warfield told me that there was extensive tree
damage on his land. By 1904 UTC the tornado was over 1/4 mile wide and was
climbing up the Laramie Ridge to 8000ft. Very old pine trees 3 to 4 ft. in
diameter were mowed down by the tornado. Tom Nowak, Jim Price and
another person were putting fish into Imson Pond in the dense fog
with visibilities near 100ft. Quarter to ping-pong ball sized hail chased
them to their trucks. This is a good thing since they were then hit by the
tornado around 1908 UTC. They described a frightening experience. The
tornado buffeted their vehicles. One truck contained a 1000 lb fish
tank. This truck rocked back and forth by the tornado and most of the
windows were smashed out. Another truck was actually lifted off the ground and
set back down, with windows knocked out as well. A camper shell was broken
off one of the trucks and flung 1/2 mile to the south. Debris was
flying everywhere during the tornado including picnic tables. Large
trees were downed on both sides of the road near the
pond.
After leaving the pond, the tornado
hit on Ramshorn Rd. Ted Lewis measured 153 mph winds on his Davis Monitor
2. His house faired fairly well even though huge pines were blown
down. A 12 ft. aluminum boat was blown 500 yds. The tornado then hit the Paul
Hanselmann house also on Ramshorn Rd. The front half of his roof was blown off,
with pieces of it found over 2 miles away. The back part of the roof
was heavily damaged. The Hanselmann house was well constructed
with concrete-filed styrafoam and was reinforced with steel rebar anchored
to the foundation.
After leaving the Hanselmann house, the tornado
moved over very rural territory for several miles. But there was
a continuous damage path all the way northwest to Overlook Rd, with
trees and fences downed all along the .6 to .9 mile wide path according to Bob
Adams who documented the tornado path. Along this path the tornado climbed in
elevation to 8500ft. Major damage occurred on West Vedauwoo road. The Gayle
Wilson house was destroyed by the tornado. The roof was taken off and
the walls collapsed. 2X4's from her roof were embedded in the ground several
feet. She told me this was quite an accomplishment since the ground is
so hard(gravel-like) that it is difficult to even dig a shovel into it. She also
reported that nails from her roof were embedded the wrong way into fence
posts 500 yds away at another residence. Ping-pong to golfball sized hail
occurred on Overlook Rd and Howe Lane. A grove of pines was downed by the
tornado on Overlook Rd. The Harriman-Laramie tornado path was
continuous for 18 miles from west of Harriman to north of Overlook Rd, and
possibly for 31 miles to north of Laramie. There is a mountainous area between
Overlook Rd and Laramie where no people live. Bob Adams told me that the
continuous path seems to have ended beyond Overlook Rd. I am not sure if it
will ever be determined whether the tornado continued all the way to
Laramie continuously.
A tornado moved across I-80 southeast of
Laramie around 1928 UTC, and then across the far eastern and northeastern part
of Laramie between 1930 and 1935 UTC. F1 damage was done to
many structures. I did not independently document the Laramie segment of
the tornado. A quick internet search revealed the following
damage:
Numerous homes damaged
Church damaged
Dance hall
damaged
College of Agriculture greenhouse facilities damaged (5 of 18
greenhouses damaged and the hoophouse greenhouse destroyed)
Storage shed and
wooden pole barn were destroyed near the greenhouses. Huge pieces of the barn
were carried 250 yds.
10 large spruce trees were either uprooted of snapped
in half at the greenhouse facilities
Many trees were snapped in half or
uprooted at the Jacoby golf course
The tornadic storm continued to
the north-northwest through central and northern Albany county. No tornado
damage occurred, but this area is very rural. Given the fog, it
is possible that tornadoes went unreported.
The Harriman-Laramie tornado moved to the north-northwest
at an average speed of 47 to 50 mph. The heading of the tornado was 320
degrees at the beginning of the path and 330 degrees toward the end. This was
an exceptionally fast moving tornado by Wyoming standards. Typically
the mid level (600-300mb) flow over southeast Wyoming is fairly weak
in tornadic situations, hence strong right-movement and slow storm motion (10 to
30 mph). The fast storm motion on May 22 is more typical of the southeastern
United States in winter or early spring. The storm accelerated as
it climbed closer to the strong mid level flow. Basically, the storm was
closer to the strong mid level winds after it climbed to 7500ft. As previously
mentioned, the tornadoes on this day moved to the northwest and north-northwest.
This is unusual, but certainly unprecedented. The April 23, 1960 tornado
moved to the north-northwest.
A small tornado apparently touched
down 3 miles south of I-80 on Harriman Road a little later in the
afternoon from another storm. This tornado moved to the
north-northwest and downed trees in several locations. Several trees
were downed 3 miles south of I80 on Harriman Rd on the William Prince
property with this storm. They estimated winds up to 80 mph. An old log
cabin was extensively damaged on Crystal Lake Road, with the
roof blown across the road. This tornado continued north-northwest. A
few trees were downed and shingles were torn off of a house. A heavy
camper was turned upside down. This damage occurred about 4 miles
east-northeast of Buford. Residents described this event as a
mini-tornado. The tornado most likely started between 2115 and
2125 UTC (325 pm MDT) and ended before 2140 UTC. These times were
obtained by matching the radar imagery to the locations that received
damage. However, the radar signatures were not nearly as clear cut with
this storm since the tornado was so small. This storm was not as strong
as the Harriman-Laramie storm, but still containted dime sized hail
that was blowing horizontally at the William Prince residence. The
southern end of the storm was centered just east of Wellington, CO
at 2038 UTC, 6 miles east of Harriman at 2108 UTC, 3 miles
west of Granite at 2129 UTC and 4 miles west-northwest of
Granite at 2137 UTC. The area southeast of Granite to east
of Harriman is completely devoid of people. It is possible that
tornadoes occurred earlier with this storm.
The path of this tornado was very close
to the path of the
April
23, 1960 tornado. It appears that the 1960 tornado path was about 1 to 2
miles west of this tornado, and about 4 to 7 miles east of the
Harriman-Laramie tornado. I
drew the path of the 1960 tornado in 2000 with the
help of Walter Ferguson whose family has resided in the local area
for several generations.
According to Wylie Walno, another tornado
apparently destroyed a barn 4 miles west of the tri-county border. Hail
accumulated to a foot deep in this area and took 3 days to melt.
I am still trying to confirm this tornado, but the area is very sparsely
populated. The same storm produced large amounts of hail west of Virginia
Dale. This center of the storm was located 5 miles southeast of Virginia
Dale at 2012 UTC, from Virginia Dale to 4 miles northwest of Virginia
Dale at 2025 UTC, 4.5 miles northwest of Virginia Dale at 2029
UTC (6 to 8 miles west of Harriman) and 1.5 miles east of Tie Siding at 2038
UTC.
A terrain map with the Windsor
and Harriman-Laramie tornado paths can be found
here.
A more zoomed in version can be found
here.
A terrain map with both Wyoming tornadoes plotted is
here.
The possible tornado that occurred several miles west of Harriman is not plotted
here. Wylie Walno reported to me that there may have been another tornado that
destroyed a barn about 4 miles west of his house(or about 5 miles west of
Harriman). Interestingly, a severe storm did move along US-287 from west
of Virginia Dale to 5-8 miles west of Harriman to just east of Tie Siding.
But there is just not enough information thus far about this event to plot
a damage path.
Meteorological
Discussion
A deep upper trough was digging into the
intermountain west at
00 UTC
May 22, 2008. 500mb winds of 100 kts on the back side of this trough were
indicative of a deepening system. The 500mb height in the center of the upper
low was 550 dm over central UT. The
surface
chart at 00 UTC showed a surface front stretching from central LA into north
TX and then into northeast NM and eastern Colorado. Only marginal moisture
was in place across western Kansas with surface dewpoints in the 50-55F range.
However, rich moisture in the Red River Valley of southern Oklahoma and north
Texas was poised to make a fast return.
The
03,
06, 09 and
12
UTC surface charts show a strong surge of moisture through western Oklahoma,
western Kansas and eventually eastern Colorado. By 03 UTC, 60-65F dewpoints
were surging through northwest Oklahoma and into the eastern Oklahoma
panhandle. In fact by
06
UTC, 55-60F surface dewpoints were already surging into eastern Colorado. By
09 UTC, the dewpoint at Limon, CO was up to 58F, with 53-55F dewpoints
along the front range of northern Colorado. Limon reported overcast skies
at 1800ft, which indicates the low level moisture was at least 1800 ft deep.
By
12
UTC the moist axis was located from southwest Kansas into eastern and
northern Colorado and had shifted a little to the northeast since 09 UTC. The 12
UTC 500mb chart indicated strong cooling since 00 UTC. The
500mb
temperature was down to -14C at Denver. The pacific cold front had already
progressed through Albuquerque as seen on the
700mb
chart. The 700mb temperature was down to -1C at Albuquerque. Mid level cooling
had obviously occurred even ahead of the front across the plains and at Denver.
By
15UTC,
the warm front had progressed into central CO and western Kansas. Rich moisture
was in place across the front range of northern CO with 54 and 55F dewpoints at
Greeley and Akron respectively. The surface theta-e axis extended from central
Kansas into northwest Kanas to Woodrow and Greeley, CO. Strong upslope flow was
occurring and rich moisture was being transported into the Laramie Ridge and up
the Laramie mountains. A surface dryline was beginning to take shape from the
western Panhandles to extreme eastern Colorado.
By
16
UTC, 55-56F dewpoints were noted as far west as Kersey and Boulder, CO, or
just south and southwest of Greeley. Initial radar echoes began to develop
just south of the Denver International Airport by 16 UTC. This area of development was along or just north of a
warm front.
The dewpoints in this initiation area were only in the 40s to near 50F.
But higher dewpoints were located just to the north and west. By
1635 UTC, 45 dbz echoes were noted at 23,000 ft about 3 miles
northeast of the airport. As earlier noted, 50 dbz echoes were
present on the lowest radar slice from Denver by 1648 UTC. The storm
was severe by 1700 UTC just west of Hudson, CO.
The
17 UTC
surface chart showed a T/TD of 70F/55F at Greeley, CO.
Modifying
the 18 UTC Denver sounding with these values yields 2800 j/kg surface based
CAPE. The moist axis extended all the way northwest to Red Feather Lakes
and Crystal Lake, where the T/TD were 43F/43F at both stations. Interestingly,
the theta-e values were the same at these stations as Haigler, NE and Concordia,
KS. T/TD values of 43F/43F at Crystal Lake and 47F/47F at Harriman have almost
the same theta-e as T/TD values of 72F/61F at Emporia, KS and 74F/61F at
Chanute, KS.
At
17 UTC the storm north of Denver and west of Hudson was rapidly
becoming severe after encountering dewpoints between 50 and 55F. The storm was 25 minutes away from producing a strong
tornado. The storm was located just ahead and to the left of a strong
dry surge.
But backed winds and relatively high theta-e low level air existed
northwest of the storm. In fact the storm was moving into a very
favorable area for tornadoes. This dry surge actually kept surging
north and was through Peckham, CO by 18 UTC. Therefore, by 18 UTC
the storm was still in roughly the
same position
relative to the strong dry surge, with relatively high theta-e air
still situated immediately to the northwest. Therefore, I conclude that
the storm managed to stay in a favorable location for tornadoes from 17
UTC through 18 UTC. This dry surge ceased its northward progress after
18 UTC. After 1815 UTC the storm passed northwest of Wellington where
surface temperatures were much cooler. The storm temporarily weakened.
Assuming saturation,
what T/TD would be required at sea level to achieve the same theta-e as
Harriman, WY? Since the T/TD were 47F/47F at Harriman, a T/TD of 66F/66F
would be required at 1000mb to yield the same theta-e. Why is this? To
understand this, let's look at the potential temperature and mixing ratio's for
both locations. For Harriman, the potential temperature and mixing raio was 89F
and 9.2 g/kg. At 1000mb, a location with T/TD of 66F/66F would have a potential
temperature of 66F and mixing ratio of 13.8 g/kg. Thus, the mixing ratio
would be 50% lower at Harriman than at the sea level location. However, the
potential temperature would be 23F higher at Harriman. Thus the notion that it
was too cool on the Laramie Ridge on May 22, 2008 for severe storms is obviously
misguided. In fact, it was warm enough so that the level of free convection was
near the ground. This is despite dense fog and actual temperatures from 44
to 48F. Thus before drawing conclusions about the severe weather environment,
one should modify soundings using actual surface observations. Sometimes this
requires the use of mesonet data since surface observations are
sparse.
Let's compare(Table 1) the theta-e values on the elevated
terrain and lower terrain by displaying temperature, dewpoint, mixing ratio,
potential temperature and equivalent potential temperatures at 17 UTC. Note that
only temperature data were available for Harriman, Lynch, Virginia Dale 7 ENE
and Emkay. Dewpoint data actually were available at the remainder of the
stations including Estes Park, Crystal Lakes and Red Feather Lakes. However,
since dense fog was present at these 4 Wyoming stations through 19 UTC, we will
assume that the dewpoints were equal to the temperatures.
Table 1 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
17
UTC |
Elev(ft) |
Pres.(mb) |
SLP(mb) |
T(F) |
Td(F) |
MR(g/kg) |
theta(F) |
theta-e(K) |
Crystal Lake |
8620 |
724 |
986 |
43 |
43 |
8.2 |
92 |
331.6 |
Estes Park |
7700 |
745 |
983 |
53 |
46 |
8.9 |
98 |
337.5 |
Harriman,WY |
7450 |
756 |
987 |
47 |
47 |
9.2 |
89 |
332.5 |
Lynch,WY |
7200 |
762 |
987 |
46 |
46 |
8.7 |
86.7 |
329.9 |
Virginia Dale 7
ENE
|
7000 |
767 |
988 |
47 |
47 |
9 |
86.9 |
330.8 |
Emkay,WY |
6720 |
774 |
989 |
49 |
49 |
9.6 |
87.6 |
333.1 |
Cheyenne |
6140 |
789 |
987.7 |
48 |
47 |
8.8 |
83.5 |
328 |
Nunn
|
5650 |
804 |
986 |
51 |
51 |
10 |
83.8 |
331.8 |
Wellington |
5300 |
813 |
985 |
55 |
54 |
11.1 |
86.3 |
336.5 |
Briggsdale S |
4838 |
833 |
991 |
55 |
54 |
10.8 |
82.6 |
333.3 |
Greeley |
4700 |
835 |
984 |
64 |
55 |
11.2 |
91.7 |
340.2 |
Akron |
4700 |
841 |
990 |
56 |
56 |
11.5 |
82.1 |
335.1 |
Goodland |
3700 |
870 |
990.7 |
69 |
60 |
12.9 |
90.4 |
344.5 |
Saint Francis |
3350 |
881 |
|
68 |
55 |
10.6 |
87.4 |
335.8 |
Hill City |
2600 |
918 |
995.5 |
65 |
58 |
11.3 |
78 |
332 |
Concordia |
1500 |
948 |
1000.5 |
65 |
59 |
11.4 |
73.1 |
329
|
OKC |
1230 |
951 |
997 |
81 |
66 |
14.6 |
88.8 |
348.5 |
Chanute |
1000 |
967 |
1001.6 |
74 |
61 |
12 |
79.1 |
334.6 |
Salina |
1280 |
957 |
999.1 |
67 |
59 |
11.3 |
73.6 |
329 |
Emporia |
1170 |
960 |
1001.5 |
72 |
61 |
12.1 |
78.2 |
334.3 |
Notice that Lynch, WY
actually has the same theta-e as Salina, KS even though the
temperature/dewpoint are 21F/13F higher at Salina. The mixing ratio is 30%
higher at Salina, so the potential temperature must compensate to yield similar
theta-e values. Indeed, the potential temperature was 86.7F at Lynch and only
73.6F at Salina.
Surface theta-e continued to increase from 17
to
18
to
19
UTC.
Tables 2 and 3 show temperature, dewpoint, mixing
ratio, potential temperature and equivalent potential temperature values for
various sites over the plains. Again, this is done to demonstrate that T/Td
values cannot be used without elevation to assess how "juiced up" the surface
layer is. In Table 5 the theta-e values between 330K and 335K are
highlighted in red. The
theta-e
values from 330 to 335K are shown in a partially analyzed surface chart for 19
UTC.
Let's compare(Table 2) the theta-e values on the elevated
terrain and lower terrain by displaying temperature, dewpoint, mixing ratio,
potential temperature and equivalent potential temperatures at 18 UTC.
Table 2 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
18
UTC |
Elev(ft) |
Pres.(mb) |
SLP(mb) |
T(F) |
Td(F) |
MR(g/kg) |
theta(F) |
theta-e(K) |
Crystal Lakes |
8620 |
723 |
|
43 |
43 |
8.2 |
91.7 |
331.4 |
Red Feather |
8214 |
733 |
|
44 |
44 |
8.4 |
90.7 |
331.4 |
Harriman,WY |
7450 |
755 |
987 |
47 |
47 |
9.2 |
89.3 |
332.7 |
Lynch,WY |
7200 |
761 |
987 |
46 |
46 |
8.8 |
87 |
330.1 |
Virginia Dale 7
ENE
|
7000 |
766 |
987 |
48 |
48 |
9.4 |
88.1 |
332.7 |
Emkay,WY |
6720 |
773 |
987 |
48 |
48 |
9.3 |
86.7 |
331.5 |
Cheyenne |
6140 |
788 |
988.2 |
49 |
49 |
9.5 |
84.8 |
330.8 |
Nunn
|
5650 |
803 |
985 |
52 |
52 |
10.4 |
85.1 |
333.7 |
Greeley |
4700 |
833 |
983 |
70 |
55 |
11.2 |
98.4 |
344.5 |
Akron |
4700 |
840 |
989.7 |
57 |
56 |
11.5 |
83.4 |
335.9 |
Goodland |
3700 |
870 |
990.7 |
64 |
59 |
12.4 |
85.2 |
339.7 |
MCcook |
2800 |
911 |
996.2 |
61 |
56 |
10.6 |
75 |
328 |
Hill City |
2600 |
918 |
994.3 |
73 |
62 |
13.1 |
86.2 |
342.4 |
Concordia |
1500 |
948 |
1000.6 |
67 |
59 |
11.4 |
75.1 |
330.3 |
Imperial |
3300 |
885 |
995.7 |
56 |
54 |
10.2 |
74.3 |
326.3 |
OKC |
1230 |
951 |
996.2 |
86 |
67 |
15.1 |
93.9 |
353.4 |
Chanute |
1000 |
967 |
1001.6 |
76 |
64 |
13.4 |
81.2 |
339.9 |
Topeka |
890
|
972 |
1004.1 |
66 |
59 |
11.1 |
70.3 |
326.4 |
Salina |
1280 |
957 |
998.6 |
73 |
61 |
12.1 |
79.7 |
335.4 |
Emporia |
1170 |
960 |
1001.4 |
76 |
63 |
13.0 |
82.3 |
339.5 |
Notice that Greeley, CO actually has a higher
theta-e than Emporia, KS even though the temperature/dewpoint are 6F/8F higher
at Emporia. The mixing ratio is 16% higher at Emporia, so the potential
temperature must have compensated to yield a higher theta-e at Greeley. Indeed,
the potential temperature was 98.4F at Greeley and only 82.3F at
Emporia.
Notice that Red Feather Lakes, CO actually has a higher theta-e
than Concordia, KS even though the temperature/dewpoint are 23F/15F higher at
Concordia. The mixing ratio is 36% higher at Concordia, so the potential
temperature must compensate to yield a higher theta-e at Red Feather Lakes.
Indeed, the potential temperature was 90.7F at Red Feather Lakes and only 75.1F
at Concordia. Severe storms passed just east of Red Feather Lakes in the early
afternoon.
Let's compare(Table 3) the theta-e values on the elevated
terrain and lower terrain by displaying temperature, dewpoint, mixing ratio,
potential temperature and equivalent potential temperatures at 19
UTC.
Table 3 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
19
UTC |
Elev(ft) |
Pres.(mb) |
SLP(mb) |
T(F) |
Td(F) |
MR(g/kg) |
theta(F) |
theta-e(K) |
Harriman,WY |
7450 |
754 |
985 |
47 |
47 |
9.3 |
89.7 |
333.3 |
Lynch,WY |
7200 |
760 |
985 |
48 |
48 |
9.5 |
89.4 |
333.6 |
Virginia Dale 7
ENE
|
7000 |
765 |
985 |
48.5 |
48.5 |
9.6 |
88.9 |
333.7 |
Emkay,WY |
6720 |
772 |
986 |
49 |
49 |
9.7 |
88.2 |
333.8 |
Cheyenne |
6140 |
787 |
987.7 |
50 |
49 |
9.5 |
86 |
331.7 |
Nunn
|
5650 |
803 |
983 |
52.5 |
52.5 |
10.6 |
85.6 |
334.6 |
Wellington |
5300 |
812 |
983 |
58 |
56 |
11.9 |
87.9 |
341.1 |
Briggsdale N |
5039 |
826 |
988 |
56 |
54 |
10.0 |
84.9 |
335.1 |
Iliff |
3900 |
865 |
988 |
55 |
54 |
10.4 |
76.8 |
328.5 |
Sterling |
3900 |
865 |
|
59 |
56 |
11.2 |
80.9 |
333.4 |
Briggsdale S |
4838 |
831 |
988 |
58 |
55 |
11.2 |
86.1 |
336.8 |
Akron |
4700 |
840 |
990 |
56 |
55 |
11.1 |
82.3 |
334.1 |
Goodland |
3700 |
870 |
990 |
69 |
61 |
13.4 |
90.4 |
345.8 |
Haigler |
3291 |
883 |
|
60 |
56 |
11 |
78.8 |
331.4 |
OBerlin |
2736 |
911 |
|
61 |
58 |
11.4 |
75 |
330.4 |
Saint Francis |
3350 |
881 |
|
68 |
57 |
11.4 |
87.4 |
338.1 |
Hill City |
2600 |
918 |
994 |
78 |
63 |
13.6 |
91.3 |
347.2 |
Concordia |
1500 |
948 |
1000 |
71 |
61 |
12.2 |
79.2 |
335.3 |
OKC |
1230 |
951 |
996 |
87 |
67 |
15.1 |
94.9 |
354.1 |
Chanute |
1000 |
967 |
1001.5 |
78 |
65 |
13.8 |
83.2 |
342.3 |
Topeka |
890
|
972 |
1003.7 |
69 |
58 |
10.7 |
73.3 |
327.2 |
Salina |
1280 |
957 |
998.0 |
74 |
62 |
12.6 |
80.7 |
337.3 |
Fairbury |
1500 |
950 |
1003.0 |
61 |
59 |
11.4 |
68.9 |
326.1 |
Scandia |
1450 |
949 |
1001 |
69 |
61 |
12.2 |
77 |
333.9 |
Notice that Harriman, WY actually has almost
the same theta-e as Scandia, KS, even though the temperature/dewpoint are
22F/14F higher at Scandia. The mixing ratio is 31% higher at Scandia, so the
potential temperature must compensate to yield similar theta-e values. Indeed,
the potential temperature was 89.7F at Harriman and only 77F at
Scandia.
At 19 UTC, two mesonet observations and 1
cooperative observer location recorded hourly temperatures. The temperature was
47F at Harriman (756mb), 48.5F at the cooperative observer site 7 miles
east-northeast of Virginia Dale (767mb) and 48F at Lynch (762mb). These 3
observations lie along the same moist adiabat, as one would expect in moist
upslope flow. So I have fairly high confidence in the accuracy of these
measurements. Veta Mitchell, the cooperative observer 7 miles east-northeast of
Virginia Dale provided me with the hourly temperature measurements for her
location. The tornado actually first touched down about 2 miles north-northwest
of her house. So the hourly measurements that she collected are very useful
in determining surface based CAPE.
An important thing to note is that a 47F dewpoint at Harriman actually has
about the same mixing ratio as a 54.5F dewpoint at 1000mb. Of course this
assumes that the sea level pressure at Virginia Dale and 1000mb are similar. If
the sea level pressure is higher at the lower elevation then the difference
would be greater. Also, even though 47F seems chilly, this temperature
at 7500ft actually lies along the same dry adiabat as 90F at 1000mb.
Since visibilities were near zero before the
storm, I am assuming that dewpoints were equal to the temperatures. I
constructed approximate soundings for these locations using the 18 UTC RUC
initialization and 18 UTC Denver sounding. Of course, the boundary layer had to
be modified based on the surface observations. I modified using the 19 UTC
observations since these are just prior to the tornadic storm. The
RUC soundings were more representative than the NAM/WRF
soundings. The nam soundings were superadiabatic near the surface and
dry adiabatic above the surface layer. This is not reasonable. The RUC
soundings were closer to moist adiabatic from the surface to above
700mb. The modified 18 UTC RUC soundings yielded similar CAPE values to the
modified 18 UTC Denver sounding. I have determined that the surface based CAPE
was 1000-1300 j/kg near the beginning of the Harriman-Laramie
tornado path where surface measurements were available. The theta-e
values at the three locations were almost
identical.
Table 4 and Table 5 show the surface based CAPE
values for Harriman, Virginia Dale and Lynch. Table 1 uses the 18 UTC Denver
sounding while Table 2 uses the 18 UTC RUC initialization. These are modified
using the temperature readings from the 3 stations and assumes saturation (there
was dense fog).
Table 4
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
DEN 18 UTC modified |
Elev(ft) |
Pres.(mb) |
T(F) |
Td(F) |
MR(g/kg) |
theta(F) |
theta-e(K) |
CAPE(j/kg) |
Harriman |
7450 |
756 |
47 |
47 |
9.2 |
89 |
332.5 |
1190 |
Virginia Dale(7ene) |
7000 |
760 |
48.5 |
48.5 |
9.6 |
88.9 |
333.7 |
1217 |
Lynch |
7200 |
766 |
48 |
48 |
9.5 |
89.4 |
333.6 |
1215 |
Table 5
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
RUC 18 UTC modified |
Elev(ft) |
Pres.(mb) |
T(F) |
Td(F) |
MR(g/kg) |
theta(F) |
theta-e(K) |
CAPE(j/kg) |
Harriman |
7450 |
756 |
47 |
47 |
9.2 |
89 |
332.5 |
1260 |
The vertical wind shear profile featured strong
shear. The surface wind backed to the northeast by midday at the mesonet
locations. However, windspeed is not represented the same way at the mesonet
locations. For some hours the wind speed was the same as the wind gust while for
other hours they were vastly different. Also, some of the winds measurements
were influenced by inflow into the storm. The pre-storm winds were probably
about 25 kts from the east-northeast or northeast(060 deg at 25kts). Wylie Walno
reported that the winds was about 20-30 kts. For the winds above the surface we
used the Medicine Bow and Platteville profilers as well as the 18 UTC RUC.
The wind just above the moist layer (600mb) was about 140 deg at 55kts. So
there was tremendous shear between the surface and 600mb (1.5 to 1.8 km agl).
The 500mb wind was from 150 deg at 55 kts while the 400mb wind was from 165 deg
at 75 kts. 400mb is 4.4 to 4.7 km above the surface, so the shear from the
surface to 4.5 km was about 80 kts.
It is very difficult to achieve low dewpoint
depressions, relatively high theta-e values at low-levels and excellent
vertical wind shear at 7500-8500ft on the Laramie Ridge/Mountains. As previously
mentioned, the dewpoints were equal to the temperatures along and east of the
summit of the Laramie Ridge. But surface based CAPE values still exceeded 1000
j/kg. In typical low plains severe storm situations, 1000 j/kg CAPE would be
considered very marginal. When CAPE is marginal, tornadic storms can still
occur, especially when LCL and LFC heights are low and considerable surface
based CAPE exists at low levels. This was indeed the case on May 22 on the
Laramie Ridge. In fact, after initially weakening upon moving into cooler air on
higher terrain northwest of Wellington, CO, the storm quickly reintensified
after encountering dense fog east of Virginia Dale.
One would think that it would be easier to
get sufficient CAPE and shear on the high terrain(7000+ ft) in June
or July than in April or May. But this is not necessarily the case. Strong
synoptic scale systems in spring can have very strong upslope flow associated
with them, whereas systems in late spring and summer tend to be weaker, with
weaker upslope flow. That said, the upslope flow tends to be cooler in April and
May and oftentimes more stable. Upslope flow tends to be located on the cool
side of a surface front or north of a developing surface low. Again, these
airmasses tend to be too cool in April and much of May. This is why significant
tornadoes are so rare in the immediate lee of the Laramie Mountains. The upslope
flow in the May 22 case was "cooler", but 1000+ j/kg surface based CAPE values
were still achieved. Elevations from 5000-6000 ft do have more severe weather in
June and July compared to April and May. But further west on the very high
terrain, strong upslope flow is generally required to obtain adequate theta-e
values, low dewpoint depressions and high shear that typically accompany
tornadic storms. By mid-June, strong upper systems become less common so that
very strong upslope flow is rare. In the May 22 case, gulf moisture raced
northwestward from north Texas and southern Oklahoma into northern Colorado and
southeast Wyoming in 9 to 12 hours from 00 to 09 UTC. Then during the day of May
22, a very strong upslope flow developed north of a surface front. Very strong
upslope flow is required to keep adequate mixing ratios at the 7000-8000 ft
elevations on the eastern slopes of the Laramie mountains. It is also important
to understand that it is the potential temperature that is important in
achieving higher theta-e values and not the temperature.Even in the presence of
only moderately cool 500-300mb temperatures of -13C, -26C and -40C, surface
temperatures from 7 to 9C were still sufficient to yield moderately high theta-e
values, and hence moderately high CAPE values. When potential temperatures are
high, mixing ratios do not have to be very high to achieve sufficiently high
theta-e values. By later in June and July, surface temperatures become so warm
that cloud bases are typically too high for tornadic storms given the meager
mixing ratios typically found at these elevations.
Additional surface charts will be coming soon.
Since terrain is so crucial to this meteorological discussion, I like to plot
the surface observations on top of the terrain. However, this is a very
labor-intensive process, especially since I need to include the mesonet
observations.
Hodographs will be constructed
soon.