Snowflowxxl
Member
no doubt, a bust is never a bad thing in the spring!NOT A BAD THING
no doubt, a bust is never a bad thing in the spring!NOT A BAD THING
It actually played out as forecasted. Storms weakening coming into Alabama. Which I am glad they did.BUST
One thing that prevented these storms from producing strong tornadoes was CIN, they were a bit elevated in nature
I was looking at the HRRR late last night and this morning, and while it showed good parameters in that area of MS, I just was not a big fan of that wind field. I was thinking that there was some VBV in the soundings from the area. That looked to be what killed the storm, IMO. Now I'm not an expert by any means, so I wanted to see if that was on point.
We all realize it's just a model forecast, but I don't recall ever seeing a sounding with that much lift. That would be a prolific hail producing cell. Look at that omega !!! ... nearly off the charts, not to mention the tornado aspect. This year has that ominous feeling to it.HERE IS THE SOUNDING FOR THE CIRCLED SUPERCELLView attachment 17543View attachment 17544
I think you are correct, definitely some VBV in some of those modeled soundings last night.
I was looking at the HRRR late last night and this morning, and while it showed good parameters in that area of MS, I just was not a big fan of that wind field. I was thinking that there was some VBV in the soundings from the area. That looked to be what killed the storm, IMO. Now I'm not an expert by any means, so I wanted to see if that was on point.
VBV has been shown by Parker & others to not really be a significant hinderance to supercell development since the backing aloft occurs well above the LFC but environments w/ limited SRH or those w/ parallel flow in the upper troposphere.
I honestly don't know so many people still refer to it as a potential cause for busted forecasts because it's not.
https://journals.ametsoc.org/doi/pdf/10.1175/WAF-D-17-0064.1
This is interesting ive always thought VBV was a killer."In this respect, ‘‘backing aloft’’ appears to be a red herring. Viewed through the lens of storm dynamics, forecasters would likely be better served by directly assessing SRH and the orientation of the upper-level flow (presumably relative to the boundary expected to initiate storms) rather than becoming overly concerned with the presence of a CCW kink or curve in the environmental hodograph."
This is interesting ive always thought VBV was a killer.
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VBV has been shown by Parker & others to not really be a significant hinderance to supercell development since the backing aloft occurs well above the LFC but environments w/ limited SRH or those w/ parallel flow in the upper troposphere.
I honestly don't know so many people still refer to it as a potential cause for busted forecasts because it's not.
https://journals.ametsoc.org/doi/pdf/10.1175/WAF-D-17-0064.1
This is interesting ive always thought VBV was a killer.
Sent from my SM-G955U using Tapatalk
During some crazy winds last night neighbor lost part of her roof!