Dual-Doppler Derived Vorticity as a Predictor of Hail Size in Severe Thunderstorms

One of the primary missions of the National Weather Service (NWS) is to use a network of more than 150 NEXRAD radar installations to monitor weather for threats to life and property. Large hail produced by severe thunderstorms is a major focus of this mission. An algorithm known as the Maximum Estim...

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Main Author: White, Trevor Stewart
Other Authors: Geography
Format: Others
Published: Virginia Tech 2017
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10919/74927
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spelling ndltd-VTETD-oai-vtechworks.lib.vt.edu-10919-749272021-04-28T05:32:17Z Dual-Doppler Derived Vorticity as a Predictor of Hail Size in Severe Thunderstorms White, Trevor Stewart Geography Carstensen, Laurence William Jr. Carroll, David F. Ruohoniemi, J. Michael hail size severe thunderstorm supercell dual Doppler One of the primary missions of the National Weather Service (NWS) is to use a network of more than 150 NEXRAD radar installations to monitor weather for threats to life and property. Large hail produced by severe thunderstorms is a major focus of this mission. An algorithm known as the Maximum Estimated Size of Hail (MESH) algorithm is in operational use to diagnose the presence and size of hail. This study aims to use dual-Doppler observations as well as the MESH algorithm to test the idea that storms that rotate produce larger hail. Previous studies have used polarimetric radar products to detect the presence of large hail and dual-Doppler methods have been used to study embryonic hail, but no research has tested the theory of hail and rotating storms with observational evidence. A set of 59 case studies was gathered; each included a hail report submitted by a trained weather spotter or NWS employee and complete radar observations through the depth of a storm from two radars. The radar observations were resampled to a three-dimensional Cartesian grid and a dual-Doppler analysis was run on each case study. A strong correlation (stronger even than the MESH algorithm) was found between measured vorticity and hail size, lending credence to the idea that rotating storms do indeed have a higher ceiling for hail production. However, no correlation was found between MESH error and rotation. Further research will be required to evaluate whether or not this relationship can be used to augment the MESH algorithm so as to improve its skill. Master of Science 2017-02-04T09:00:39Z 2017-02-04T09:00:39Z 2017-02-03 Thesis vt_gsexam:9568 http://hdl.handle.net/10919/74927 In Copyright http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/ ETD application/pdf Virginia Tech
collection NDLTD
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic hail size
severe thunderstorm
supercell
dual Doppler
spellingShingle hail size
severe thunderstorm
supercell
dual Doppler
White, Trevor Stewart
Dual-Doppler Derived Vorticity as a Predictor of Hail Size in Severe Thunderstorms
description One of the primary missions of the National Weather Service (NWS) is to use a network of more than 150 NEXRAD radar installations to monitor weather for threats to life and property. Large hail produced by severe thunderstorms is a major focus of this mission. An algorithm known as the Maximum Estimated Size of Hail (MESH) algorithm is in operational use to diagnose the presence and size of hail. This study aims to use dual-Doppler observations as well as the MESH algorithm to test the idea that storms that rotate produce larger hail. Previous studies have used polarimetric radar products to detect the presence of large hail and dual-Doppler methods have been used to study embryonic hail, but no research has tested the theory of hail and rotating storms with observational evidence. A set of 59 case studies was gathered; each included a hail report submitted by a trained weather spotter or NWS employee and complete radar observations through the depth of a storm from two radars. The radar observations were resampled to a three-dimensional Cartesian grid and a dual-Doppler analysis was run on each case study. A strong correlation (stronger even than the MESH algorithm) was found between measured vorticity and hail size, lending credence to the idea that rotating storms do indeed have a higher ceiling for hail production. However, no correlation was found between MESH error and rotation. Further research will be required to evaluate whether or not this relationship can be used to augment the MESH algorithm so as to improve its skill. === Master of Science
author2 Geography
author_facet Geography
White, Trevor Stewart
author White, Trevor Stewart
author_sort White, Trevor Stewart
title Dual-Doppler Derived Vorticity as a Predictor of Hail Size in Severe Thunderstorms
title_short Dual-Doppler Derived Vorticity as a Predictor of Hail Size in Severe Thunderstorms
title_full Dual-Doppler Derived Vorticity as a Predictor of Hail Size in Severe Thunderstorms
title_fullStr Dual-Doppler Derived Vorticity as a Predictor of Hail Size in Severe Thunderstorms
title_full_unstemmed Dual-Doppler Derived Vorticity as a Predictor of Hail Size in Severe Thunderstorms
title_sort dual-doppler derived vorticity as a predictor of hail size in severe thunderstorms
publisher Virginia Tech
publishDate 2017
url http://hdl.handle.net/10919/74927
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