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Tornadoes

Tornadoes. Tornado. A violently rotating column of air (vortex), hanging from a cumulonimbus cloud, with circulation that touches the surface of the earth. Other Names for Tornadoes. Tornado comes from the Spanish word, tronada , which means “thunderstorm .”

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Tornadoes

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  1. Tornadoes

  2. Tornado A violently rotating column of air (vortex), hanging from a cumulonimbus cloud, with circulation that touches the surface of the earth

  3. Other Names for Tornadoes • Tornado comes from the Spanish word, tronada, which means “thunderstorm.” • twisters, dust devils, whirlwinds, waterspouts, and cyclones

  4. Waterspouts A waterspout is a tornado that forms over a body of water, or a tornado that moves from land onto water

  5. Tornado Facts • Tornadoes can occur almost anywhere in the world • Duration: a few minutes • Diameter (Avg.): 0.4 km • Length of path (Avg.): 6 km • Funnel can travel from 0 mph up to ~70 mph, usually travels at 30 mph • 99% of all tornadoes in Northern Hemisphere rotate counterclockwise • Texas is #1 for frequency of tornadoes per year • Between 1950 and 1995 Texas had 5,722 recorded tornadoes • Risk of death in a tornado in Texas: 1 in 1,054,267

  6. How do tornadoes form? • Winds at 2 different altitudes blow at 2 different speeds creating “wind shear” (Creates an invisible, horizontal spinning effect in the lower atmosphere) http://www.nssl.noaa.gov/edu/safety/tornadoguide.html

  7. Wind Shear

  8. How do tornadoes form? • Rising air within the thunderstorm updraft tilts the rotating air from horizontal to vertical. http://www.nssl.noaa.gov/edu/safety/tornadoguide.html

  9. How do tornadoes form? An area of rotation, 2-6 miles wide, now extends through much of the storm. Most strong and violent tornadoes form within this area of strong rotation. http://www.nssl.noaa.gov/edu/safety/tornadoguide.html

  10. Beginning Stage: Tornado begins as a rotating wall cloud which quickly evolves into a funnel

  11. Early Stage: Tornado funnel develops (may be transparent) and extends down from the cloud to the ground

  12. Mature Stage: Tornado funnel reaches maximum width as well as maximum intensity then begins to shrink

  13. Decay Stage: Tornado may remain stationary and take on a ropelike appearance before dissipating

  14. Tornado Wind Speed In 1971, Dr. Fujita developed a way of measuring the winds of a tornado. He reasoned that there was a link between wind speed and the damage caused by a tornado. There are 6 categories of tornados (F0 – F5) *** IMPORTANT NOTE ABOUT F-SCALE WINDS: Do not use F-scale winds literally. These precise wind speed numbers are actually guesses and have never been scientifically verified. Different wind speeds may cause similar-looking damage from place to place -- even from building to building. Without a thorough engineering analysis of tornado damage in any event, the actual wind speeds needed to cause that damage are unknown.

  15. Fujita vs Enhanced Fujita *** IMPORTANT NOTE ABOUT ENHANCED F-SCALE WINDS:The Enhanced F-scale still is a set of wind estimates (not measurements) based on damage. Its uses three-second gusts estimated at the point of damage based on a judgment of 8 levels of damage to the 28 indicators listed below. These estimates vary with height and exposure. Important: The 3 second gust is not the same wind as in standard surface observations. Standard measurements are taken by weather stations in open exposures, using a directly measured, "one minute mile" speed. http://www.spc.noaa.gov/faq/tornado/ef-scale.html

  16. Weak Tornadoes • 69% of all tornadoes • Less than 5% of tornado deaths • Lifetime 1-10+ minutes • Winds less than 110 mph

  17. F0 Category • (Weak) winds (40-72) mph , little damage • Damage: tree branches snapped, chimneys toppled, signs torn down

  18. Strong Tornadoes • 29% of all tornadoes • Nearly 30% of all tornado deaths • May last 20 minutes or longer • Winds 110-205 mph

  19. F3 Category • (Strong) winds: (158-206) mph, severe damage • Damage: most trees uprooted, trains overturned, roofs torn off, walls demolished

  20. Violent Tornadoes • Only 2% of all tornadoes • 70% of all tornado deaths • Lifetime can exceed 1 hour

  21. F5 Category • (Violent) winds: (261- 319) mph, incredible damage; rare • Damage: bark peeled off trees, houses lifted off foundations, vehicles travel greater than 100 m through the air

  22. Tornado Occurrence by Category

  23. Tornado Deaths by Category

  24. Tornado Indicators • Greenish colored sky • Mammatus clouds • Sudden drop in barometric pressure • Large hail of at least .75 in. diameter • Strong winds > 60 mph • Frequent and intense lightning • Rotating wall cloud or a cloud that appears to hang from the sky • A loud rumbling noise- seek shelter!

  25. Mammatus clouds Green sky

  26. Tornado Frequency • Southern states: peak March - May, • Northern states: Summer. • Time of day: peak 3 and 9 p.m

  27. Where Tornados Occur “Tornado Alley” covers the Great Plains states

  28. Did Dorothy from the Wizard of Oz live in “Tornado Alley?”

  29. Dopplar Radar • Uses radio waves to measure intensity of precipitation and how fast the rain or hail is moving toward or away from the radar

  30. Tornados on Radar Doppler image of a rain-wrapped tornado

  31. Tornado Watches & Warnings • Watch - conditions are favorable for severe weather to develop • Warning - information provided by weather radar, and spotters (law enforcement) on the ground, severe weather is imminent. • Severe thunderstorm warnings are passed to local radio and television stations and are broadcast over local NOAA Weather Radio stations serving the warned areas. These warnings are also relayed to local emergency management and public safety officials who can activate local warning systems to alert communities.

  32. What to do… If a Warning is issued or if threatening weather approaches: • In a home or building, move to a pre-designated shelter, such as a basement. • If an underground shelter is not available, move to an interior room or hallway on the lowest floor and get under a sturdy piece of furniture. • Stay away from windows. • Get out of automobiles. • Do not try to outrun a tornado in your car; instead, leave it immediately. • Mobile homes, even if tied down, offer little protection from tornadoes and should be abandoned.

  33. Tornado History • “Tri-State Tornado” - the most violent tornado on record • March 18, 1925, the tornado formed in Missouri and traveled 219 miles across Illinois into Indiana • The funnel was up to ¾ of a mile across and traveled as fast as 73 mph. • It killed approximately 635 people

  34. Tornado Myths • A highway overpass is a safe place to take shelter under during a tornado • Opening windows during a tornado will help balance the pressure between the inside and outside of the house and may prevent destruction of the structure • One should seek shelter in the southwest corner of a house or basement.

  35. Tornado Oddities Tornados are reported to routinely carry objects many miles and have: • sucked the frogs out of a pond and dropped them on a town • carried a necktie rack with 10 ties attached 40 miles • carried a flour sack 110 miles from a mill Tornados also drive objects into other objects and have: • Driven splinters into an iron fire hydrant • Driven straw and grass into telephone poles

  36. View from the air of a tornado path in central OK

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