Anticyclonic tornado

An anticyclonic tornado is a tornado which rotates in a clockwise direction in the Northern Hemisphere and a counterclockwise direction in the Southern Hemisphere.[1] The term is a naming convention denoting the anomaly from normal rotation which is cyclonic in upwards of 98 percent of tornadoes. Many anticyclonic tornadoes are smaller and weaker than cyclonic tornadoes, forming from a different process, as either companion/satellite tornadoes or nonmesocyclonic tornadoes.[2]

An anticyclonic tornado near Big Spring, Texas on May 22, 2016 captured by storm chaser Aaron Jayjack.

Formation

Most strong tornadoes form in the inflow and updraft area bordering the updraft-downdraft interface (which is also near the mesoscale "triple point") zone of supercell thunderstorms. The thunderstorm itself is rotating, with a rotating updraft known as a mesocyclone, and then a smaller area of rotation at lower altitude the tornadocyclone (or low-level mesocyclone) which produces or enables the smaller rotation that is a tornado. All of these may be quasi-vertically aligned continuing from the ground to the mid-upper levels of the storm. All of these cyclones and scaling all the way up to large extratropical (low-pressure systems) and tropical cyclones rotate cyclonically. Rotation in these synoptic scale systems stems partly from the Coriolis effect, but thunderstorms and tornadoes are too small to be significantly affected. The common property here is an area of lower pressure, thus surrounding air flows into the area of less dense air forming cyclonic rotation. The rotation of the thunderstorm itself is induced mostly by vertical wind shear, specifically clockwise turning as altitude increases (called a veered vertical profile, although backed profiles can occur with anticyclonic supercells]].

Various processes can produce an anticyclonic tornado. Most often they are satellite tornadoes of larger tornadoes which are directly associated with the tornadocyclone and mesocyclone. Occasionally anticyclonic tornadoes occur as an anticyclonic companion (mesoanticyclone) to a mesocyclone within a single storm. Anticyclonic tornadoes can occur as the primary tornado with a mesocyclone and under a rotating wall cloud. Also, anticyclonic supercells (with mesoanticyclone), which usually are storms that split and move to the left of the parent storm motion, though very rarely spawning tornadoes, spawn anticyclonic tornadoes. There is an increased incidence of anticyclonic tornadoes associated with tropical cyclones, and mesovortices within bow echoes may spawn anticyclonic tornadoes.[3]

The first anticyclonic tornado associated with a mesoanticyclone was spotted on WSR-88D weather radar in Sunnyvale, California May 4, 1998. The tornado was an F-2 on the Fujita Scale.[4]

Known "anticyclonic tornado" events

DateLocationNotes and References
8 June 1951Corn, OklahomaFirst known tornado filmed in the US, a companion or cyclic tornado to another significant tornado[5]
6 June 1975Freedom, Oklahoma[6][7]
13 June 1976Central Iowa[8]
6 April 1980Grand Island, Nebraska[9]
4 April 1981West Bend, Wisconsin1981 West Bend F4 anticyclonic tornado
4 May 1998San Francisco Bay Area, California[4]
13 June 1998Northern Oklahoma City, OklahomaStarted as a waterspout on Lake Hefner and then hit land[10]
19 April 2002Lubbock, Texas
6 September 2004Chek-Lap-Kok International Airport, Hong Kong, China[11]
24 April 2006El Reno, Oklahoma[2]
20 June 2006Rushville, Nebraska
10 May 2010South-central OklahomaTwo tornadoes associated with anticyclonic supercell[12]
31 May 2013El Reno, OklahomaEF2 southeast of the 2013 EF3 El Reno tornado[13]
4 June 2015Elbert County, Colorado[14]
31 March 2016

Hohenwald, Tennessee [15]

5 April 2017Shelbyville, Tennessee[16]
5 January 2019Seymour, TexasTwo possible and confirmation coming
15 June 2019Estelline, South DakotaLasted approximately 45 seconds and damaged about 7 trees[17][18][19]
19 April 2020 Elko, Georgia [20]

See also

References

  1. Edwards, Roger. "The Online Tornado FAQ". NWS Storm Prediction Center. Retrieved 2019-05-02.
  2. Samenow, Jason (5 June 2013). "The rare "anticyclonic" tornado in El Reno, Okla.; not its first encounter". The Washington Post. Retrieved 9 April 2019.
  3. Stull, Roland B. (2000). Meteorology for Scientists and Engineers (2nd ed.). Thomson Learning. ISBN 9780534372149.
  4. Monteverdi, John P.; Blier, Warren; Stumpf, Greg; Pi, Wilfred; Anderson, Karl (November 2001). "First WSR-88D Documentation of an Anticyclonic Supercell with Anticyclonic Tornadoes: The Sunnyvale–Los Altos, California, Tornadoes of 4 May 1998". Monthly Weather Review. 129 (11): 2805–2814. Bibcode:2001MWRv..129.2805M. doi:10.1175/1520-0493(2001)129<2805:FWDOAA>2.0.CO;2.
  5. Grazulis, Thomas. The Tornado Natures Ultimate Windstorm. Norman, OK: University of Oklahoma Press. p. 237. Retrieved 2 June 2020.
  6. "Freedom, Oklahoma Anticyclonic Tornado - June 6, 1975". Youtube. cyclonejimcom. Retrieved 9 April 2019.
  7. Grazulis, Thomas P. "Twister: Fury on the Plains (1995)". imdb. Music Video Productions (co-production); The Tornado Project. Retrieved 9 April 2019.
  8. Brown, John M.; Knupp, Kevin R. (October 1980). "The Iowa Cyclonic-Anticyclonic Tornado Pair and Its Parent Thunderstorm". Monthly Weather Review. 108 (10): 1626–1646. doi:10.1175/1520-0493(1980)108<1626:TICATP>2.0.CO;2.
  9. Bunkers, Matthew J.; Stoppkotte, John W. (31 January 2007). "Documentation of a Rare Tornadic Left-Moving Supercell". Electronic Journal of Severe Storms Meteorology. 2 (2): 1–22. Retrieved 9 April 2019.
  10. Morgan, Mike. "June 13, 1998: Rare OKC twister defies nature, spins clockwise". Oklahomas News 4. KFOR. Retrieved 15 June 2020.
  11. Kosiba, Karen A.; Robinson, Paul; Chan, P. W.; Wurman, Joshua (2014). "Wind Field of a Nonmesocyclone Anticyclonic Tornado Crossing the Hong Kong International Airport". 2014 (597378). Hindawi. doi:10.1155/2014/597378. Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  12. "The May 10, 2010 Tornado Outbreak in Oklahoma". National Weather Service Forecast Office - Norman, Oklahoma. 2010. Retrieved 2019-05-02.
  13. Norman, N. W. S. (2013-06-04). "The tornado count for May 31 will rise as analysis continues, including an anticyclonic EF2 tornado SE of the El Reno tornado. #okwx". @NWSNorman. Retrieved 2019-09-24.
  14. "Storm Damage Surveys for June 4th Tornadoes". Denver/Boulder, CO Weather Forecast Office. Retrieved 10 April 2019.
  15. "March 31, 2016 Tornadoes". National Weather Service.
  16. Edwards, Christina. "A "very unique event": Rare anticyclonic tornado touched down in southeastern Tennessee Wednesday". WHNT News (Channel 9 FOX). Retrieved 10 April 2019.
  17. Donegan, Brian. "A Rare Clockwise-Rotating Tornado Touched Down in South Dakota Last Weekend". Weather.com. Weather.com. Retrieved 19 June 2019.
  18. Bates, Becky. "Rare clockwise-spinning tornado touches down in South Dakota". KTVQ. KTVQ. Retrieved 19 June 2019.
  19. Smith, Grant. "Rare anticyclonic tornado spotted in Deuel County". KELO. KELO. Retrieved 19 June 2019.
  20. NWS Damage Survey for April 19th Tornado in Houston County (Report). Iowa Environmental Mesonet. National Weather Service Weather Forecast Office in Peachtree City, Georgia. April 20, 2020. Retrieved April 28, 2020.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.