Stalled Pulsing Inertial Oscillation Model for a Tornadic Cyclone

Stalled Pulsing Inertial Oscillation Model for a Tornadic Cyclone - Paperback

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Stalled Pulsing Inertial Oscillation Model for a Tornadic Cyclone

Stalled Pulsing Inertial Oscillation Model for a Tornadic Cyclone - Paperback

$25.56
Sale price  $25.56 Regular price 

by Nasa Technical Reports Server (Ntrs) (Created by), Robert C. Costen (Author)

A supercell storm is a tall, rotating thunderstorm that can generate hail and tornadoes. Two models exist for the development of the storm's rotation or mesocyclone - the conventional splitting-storm model, and the more recent pulsing inertial oscillation (PIO) model, in which a nonlinear pulse represents the supercell. Although data support both models and both could operate in the same supercell, neither model has satisfactorily explained the tornadic cyclone. A tornadic cyclone is an elevated vorticity concentration of Rossby number approximately 1000 that develops within the contracting mesocyclone shortly before a major tornado appears at the surface. We now show that if the internal temperature excess due to latent energy release is limited to the realistic range of -12 K to +12 K, the PIO model can stall part way through the pulse in a state of contraction and spin-up. Should this happen, the stalled-PIO model can evolve into a tornadic cyclone with a central pressure deficit that exceeds 40 mb, which is greater than the largest measured value. This simulation uses data from a major tornadic supercell that occurred over Oklahoma City, Oklahoma, USA, on May 3, 1999. The stalled-PIO mechanism also provides a strategy for human intervention to retard or reverse the development of a tornadic cyclone and its pendant tornado.

Number of Pages: 60
Dimensions: 0.12 x 9.69 x 7.44 IN
Publication Date: June 28, 2013

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