College level lectures that are entertaining and free to watch, as someone with a massive intrest in Meteorology and no desire to go to a proper university, these videos have taught me so much I never thought I would be able to learn. Thanks for all your hard work Trey, it is much appreciated, I hope your channel will grow to whatever size you desire it to. c:
Probably the most underrated channel still out there regarding convective breakdowns. One of these days my hope is the subscriber numbers will skyrocket
This channel and Tim Vasquez' Forecast Lab both deserve way more than they currently get. Someone needs to teach the algorithm about quality over hype.
@@DaydreamNative thanks for mentioning Tim, now I have a whole other channel to deep dive and learn about storms! Looks like he does some serious breakdowns with the nitty gritty like Trey does
@@lennys6059 Yeah, it's a slightly different format with a more general focus given the day to day schedule and intends to teach how to analyse your local weather yourself rather than trying to cover it all, generally not quite as in-depth or comprehensive as what Trey puts out but equally essential viewing IMO.
Wow. I randomly looked up El Reno sub-vortices, not really expecting to find anything more than Skip Talbot's old videos, and somehow I picked the exact perfect day to do that search. Gonna give this a solid watch when I can.
The cape values were in fact that high. Storm chasing that day, we saw close to 6000 cape values before(i mean within 30 mins of storm initiation) and ground obs at highway 81 just south of el reno showing a strong backing wind ahead of the frontal boundary. I have not seen since then as high of cape values with such a storm. This storm veered southeast immediately after el reno. With the meso splitting in two. Creating a semi quasi linear line. It produced tornadoes in south okc as well. Very dynamic and very rare. And remember this was a week AFTER Moore took another direct ef 5.
Tbh I only understand about 20% of the information but these videos are so well put together and explained. For someone like me (with little to no meteorology experience) to end the video and learn something... you are talented. Thank you for the time and effort you spend on this, it's appreciated!
Wow, Trey! This was absolutely fantastic!! I will have to watch this several times to ingest everything presented here. Thank you VERY much for putting this incredible case study together!!
The best breakdown of the event! In painstaking, granular detail that many other videos miss... especially the part about the motion and speed of the main inner vortex! Astonishing!
If I could make a suggestion - the Tri-State Tornado is shrouded in a lot of mystery - documentation may not be as readily available on that storm, but I think it would be quite a piece to look at if you made an analysis of that!
Isn't it generally believed nowadays that the Tri-State was a series of tornadoes from a cyclical supercell? Or perhaps there is just not enough evidence to make any real conclusion.
i completely agree that an analysis of the tri-state tornado would be great, but without modern radar and documentation of the storm, it definitely would be a very challenging and inhibited video due to those factors
I agree; it's on my list! Only issue with those old events is the data archives are quite sparse, but I think the Tri-State Tornado has enough literature out there that I could construct a solid video on it.
@@ConvectiveChronicles Use the 2021 Quad State Supercell as a starting off point for the Tri State Storm. Because theory suggests that the 1925 Tri State Tornado was likely identical to the 2021 Kentucky Tornado.
I can watch the same video of yours multiple times and am fascinated every time. I don’t even understand 99% of what you’re talking about, but the presentation and information is so well presented it still captivates my entire attention every time. Amazing
Trey, this is an absolutely incredible breakdown. There is so much information to digest. It'll definitely warrant another watch (or two!) What an absolute beast of a storm! My mind is blown by the anti-cyclonic multi-vortex sub vortex. I think it's amazing how there weren't even more casualties and fatalities with this storm. Wonderful stuff Trey, keep up the groundbreaking work 👏
Around 22:30 you talked about why the Tornado became rain wrapped. Could you explain further why weak outflow winds in the mid-level allowed for that to happen? How does stronger outflow winds cause an LP supercell? Are we talking about the RDL here? I’ve always been confused how LP vs HP supercells form and would love some clarity. Thanks in advance!
Strong storm-relative outflow winds help to push, or vent, the precipitation in the mid-levels away from the updraft/mesocyclone region of the supercell, which helps make any tornadoes that occur more visible and can yield LP supercells. In contrast, when you have weak storm-relative outflow winds, the precipitation is not vented away from the updraft/mesocyclone region of the supercell. Thus, the rain falls very close to or within the mesocyclone area of the storm, which yields a more HP storm and obstructs the view any tornado that may form. I hope this helps; let me know if you have any other questions. You can also get some more info on these processes at the following link, just scroll down a bit to the "Storm-Relative Wind" section: cameronnixonphotography.wordpress.com/research/the-storm-relative-hodograph/
This might be the best one yet! Great work. I will always remember this day, but not particularly because of El Reno. This day also had a QLCS tornado event in the St. Louis metro area with an EF-3 which went right through everyone I know and love. My grandmother, who nearly took a direct hit, was hard to reach for an hour. However, I was so focused on STL that I had no idea what was happening in Oklahoma. But I remember the first image I saw from that day was the destroyed TWC Tornado Hunt vehicle. Since I was an avid TWC viewer, that chilled me to my bone. Again, excellent work!
Thank you! This case study did require a lot more work because this tornado has so many unique/noteworthy facets, so I appreciate that! Wow, I hope your grandmother came out ok. There was definitely a volatile atmosphere in place up that way, so I'm not surprised there were some strong tornadoes.
@Convective Chronicles Yeah she was fine. No one was killed or injured in the tornado. The actual tornado went a quarter mile to her north, but their neighborhood caught the RFD surge with estimated 100mph winds which snapped several dozen trees in her neighborhood.
i appreciate you and your sharing of these discussions and case studies. its given me a sense that i dont know a lot about meteorology, which is absolutely fun because it means i have much to learn. so, thank you for sharing these
Is there any correlation with high cape/low shear and ascending tornadogenesis and vice versa? I think tornadogenesis can and does happen both ways depending on condition variables.
So that is one of my hypotheses. In my master's thesis, I looked at four different events w/ high-res mobile radar data. Found ascending tornadogenesis in the Elmer, OK case (shown in the video) and descending tornadogenesis in the 6-15-19 Putnam, OK case. The former was a higher shear case, while Putnam was a much weaker shear case. Obviously it's a small sample size, but there may be some merit to that hypothesis.
@@hgbugalou This 2 Mile wide Monster was an unpredictable and complex Tornado. It was like it was designed to kill Storm Chasers. Twistex died because they were Unable to get to Safety when the Sub-vortices suddenly changed direction and snagged their Chevy Colbalt.
As always I love the videos. I’ve been storm spotting for 2 years now and this year I’ve been diving deep into the meteorology and you have been a big part in that so thank you!!!
Awesome work! Love looking at these, there such a great tool to understand more severe weather concepts as I move towards my atmospheric science degree. Keep up the great work!
Have always been a storm enthusiasts since I was young. Have always regretted not taking my career path in that direction. Met the twistex crew 6 or so weeks before this when I was in Denton texas. Tim and Paul both seemed like great people talked a bit and shook hands. Was watching that tornado on TV, was deeply sadend upon hearing about their incident.
Amazing work man. If you get the time, I would love to see your breakdown of the early May 2003 tornado outbreak. My hometown of Jackson, TN was struck by the 2nd of 3 (E)F4 tornadoes in just 9 years on May 4, 2003. I feel like that was a really interesting setup given the widespread and long lived nature of it. Keep up the great work!
Awesome video Trey! I am not a meteorologist by any means, and have not read research papers for this event, but in regards to the discussion of deviant motion and tornado width increase, a thought I am having is: could there be some relation between the average angle between the rear and forward flank downdrafts (if that's a thing) and the "width" of the inflow region (thus contributing to increase in the inflow flow rate and/or the increase in tornado width?)...or something else? In looking at the slide at about 45:00 in the video, the "average angle" I guess you could say between the main forward and rear flank downdraft seems to increase a bit from 2307:35 to 2310:44....and after 2310:44 is when the widening of the tornado happens...just a thought I had.
Thank you! Hmmm, interesting idea, one that I haven't thought of before. My hypothesis of the mechanism behind a tornado's size change is that there's an increase in streamwise vorticity ingestion; i.e. a large area of favorable "spin" that the tornado encounters that allows for a lot more vorticity to be concentrated within the low-level mesocyclone, hence perhaps causing widening of the tornado. That source could be a streamwise vorticity current (SVC), remnant surface boundary, etc. Your theory is interesting and perhaps a lot simpler...you can also see at 45:00, the 2314:09 box has a lot larger of a "cocoon" - i.e. the area or interface between the FFD and RFD - than the previous times. Perhaps a change in that angle you mention does something to change the size of that interface, creating a larger area for the vorticity concentration within the mesocyclone to occur.
0:01 that Malta MT supercell was something else..... . MT can get storms like that.... but not that often (especially in the last ~5 years.... everything just goes QLCS)
@@ConvectiveChronicles I live in glasgow/fort peck area . I was watching the Malta storm on radar and cussing because my boss would not let me leave 4 hours early LOL . . But ya.... some crazy storms up here Also had a storm turn 90 degrees, head straight south right over my shop . TONS of low level rotation . Also had quarter size hail, but they were flat... not round . Very strange . . Lost all the pics and videos of that storm when I broke my phone sadly
Wonderful video. I am in no way shape or form educated at all on the meteorology of these storms, but you have a way of explaining the science behind them that is easy to comprehend while also keeping all of the crucial information in that I do not know. You've gained a new subscriber, and I will be watching to learn more. Keep up the great work.
My bad I thought the yellow line represents the center of the tornado not subvortex path. All those vortices popped up around Twistex. I wonder if that’s why they couldnt reverse. 1 was behind them too.
This is amazing, thank you! Folks in the area should visit the Big Well museum in Greensburg, KS which displays an amazing retelling of the event along with some of the debris and a tower to look out at how the town changed. I definitely cried due to how real their museum made it feel. They also include the story of how they recovered which is super inspiring.
Thank you! I made my first visit to the Greensburg museum last year; it was an incredible experience. I always enjoy driving through town and seeing how far they’ve come since that fateful day.
This was fascinating. I’m glad you spent some time going over the behavior of the tornado. Seeing that info on the sub-vortices was kind of mind-blowing. And I’d not heard that the anti-cyclonic tornado was multi-vortex, too. Thanks again, I was really excited to see you’d done this case study.
Skip Talbot got video of the anti-cyclonic, it was like a mini version of the El Reno tornado, with a rotating cloud base producing several constantly changing vortices (mostly without visible condensation funnels)
I dont even know what to say. This is the best meteorolgical analysis of anything I have ever seen. It's my second video. Im blown away. I wish you did convective winter storms as that's my passion. But man, Im gobsmacked by your videos!!
At 52:50 u mentioned that the tornado has to deviate back to the north because the tornado initially turned south east. To my untrained eye the speeding up of the tornado happens to be at around the time it is going back up north trying to follow the apparent storm motion. can this be some something like a slingshot, since the storm base and top levels are connected and the tornado is getting pulled?
That's an interesting question that's hard to know for sure...I think the change in speed had some other factors that went into it, but that's an interesting proposition.
Subscribed instantly....you present a very informative and interesting analysis. From an Australian Storm Chaser...Thank you for providing this content
In the dominator footage showing the satellite vortex (40.06), another more energetic vortex (to the “right” of what you are calling the satellite vortex) is obvious. It even appears more “outside” the main circulation than the vortex you are referring to. What is that? Accepting the fact that it is another satellite vortex, what makes the leftish vortex that you are pointing to so special?
yes, and capturing it just in that one moment of time, I’m not sure which of those two vortices, or the many others that may have subsequently developed that were never witnessed, would’ve been the culprit of…..anything. I understand how incredibly difficult it is to get the proper radars, instruments, personnel, etc., in place to study such a dangerous storm, indeed, if any tornado. One thing that is often overlooked, that you allude to in this video regarding over-estimating the wind speed of this tornado, is that radar artifacts may be present. We need to understand the fact that tornado science is often working with very limited data sets, and circumstances are not easily applied to other storms in analogous situations, since there may in fact not be analogous situations to study! It is all very interesting to me. Tornado science seems to rely mostly on phenomenology with n=1, and often on forcing hypotheses to be correct, when it may be a correlation/causality misinterpretation. At any rate, very good work, and I have learned a lot from your channel. I know just enough to be dangerous in meteorology, being a science, PhD myself. Educational and technically dense, which I enjoy.
Love the long form content! I've watched plenty of tornado and storm related channels but you are by far my favorite. I live in central Oklahoma not but 20-30 miles from this tornado at the time. It was wild trying to find shelter as this monster was coming through
Thanks so much for the kind words! Can’t imagine what that day must’ve been like living so close to that storm; I live in Norman now and haven’t yet had a scare like that. I’m sure it’s only a matter of time.
Are there surface temperature/dew point or VT maps available slice by slice with the dow data? I have never seen mesonet type data with this in a map form. I'm guessing the resolution would be too sparse this zoomed in with that many frequent time slices. I've always been curious if this event could have been a psuedo warm seclusion like event we see with larger tropical systems just on a much smaller scale, namely the strengthening and loop de loop behaviour post occlusion.
Unfortunately not; the mobile radars aren’t equipped with instruments to measure those environmental variables, and there isn’t any source that measures those variables on that time scale. The Oklahoma Mesonet would be closest, but it still isn’t as high resolution, both in time and space.
@@ConvectiveChronicles Yeah I kind of figure that seeing as how you would need probes ever km or more to pick up things on this scale. Hopefully the work Leigh Orf and others are doing will allow us to plug in variables and run a model that is accurate to nature pretty soon.
Whoa the Elmer tornado was mentioned here? That was a curveball. I was working with TTU's atmospheric sciences team on that one. Cool that it was part of your thesis!
Just saw this on my recommendation definetly worth watching and very informative learning about how this tornado formed, its structure and what makes it not only the widdest tornado and its unusual nature.
Could you do the Albany GA EF3 tornado? Been curious how such a strong cell remained strong in a squall line filled with short-lived rotations. Long track EF3 with a lot of size and intensity changes throughout it's life.
@ConvectiveChronicles Jan 22, 2017. Came from a squall line (of many that day and before) but was long track and very strong for that time of year and it not being from a discrete cell. I believe it was a strong rotating cell within the squall line. Hit mobile home parks in Albany bad. Several tornadoes and warned storm have followed nearly identical paths over time, from Leesburg south to Moultrie area. Worth County is especially a hot spot due to its height in miles and location, like NW GA counties.
@@ConvectiveChronicles I've got a few short videos of the approaching rotation and one from inside a home where it passed 1/4 from us near its widest point.
@@gl3618Ah, that's right. I do have that day on my list, but more so to analyze why the High Risk seemed to underperform in general, despite a couple stronger tornadoes like the Albany one.
@ConvectiveChronicles crazy day. I booked it from Dothan Alabama to the area of Harris road you'll read about with that tornado, 30 mins before it hit. Had reserve duty that weekend and convinced command to let us all leave a little early. Entire storm was rotating with it. I can email you the short videos I have, almost got struck just before it appeared as a wall of clay behind some trees. Sadly my video from inside is brief because we turned and went to a better place inside. Went white out conditions outside the window and we were maybe 1/4 mile from the visual funnel...that was a massive wedge.
you were discussing tornado genesis where there are two methods, one descending and one ascending. my question is, in tornado families is it more common for it to be a descending tornado genesis, or is it ascending. also is it likely that just the initial tornado in a family would be an ascending tornado, then all following tornadoes to be descending, or could there be a mix of them?
So unfortunately, those are questions we just can't answer yet. I don't think it necessarily has to do with whether or not it's a tornado family, it probably has more to do with the environment. But, we don't have enough datasets from enough storms to really know the answers. Tornadogenesis mechanisms are often only able to be resolved with high-resolution mobile radar, and I can tell you from experience, actually getting a dataset that goes from just before to just after tornadogenesis is tough. Hopefully, more research will be done on the future on this topic.
This was a fantastic analysis; I think the data used for drawn conclusions here are as good and effective at narrowing down the reason for the seemingly erratic behavior of this tornado, as what I've read from PhD mets and others. Just truly great data-backed and objective analysis. Somewhat of a disclaimer; Tim Samaras was my biological father (discovered this truth in 2006), and I haven't been able to bring myself to study this event until a couple years ago. Once I began studying this, I could not get enough of the meteorology and the physics behind it. I know that Tim, Paul, and Carl would have wanted this type of intensive studying of the physics of this event. But thanks again for the great, data-backed analysis here and references to peer-reviewed works! Looking forward to others on the horizon including May 20, 2013 Moore OK, perhaps Greensburg KS EF5, Parkersburg IA in 2008, or even way back to the Palm Sunday Outbreak in the 60s.
Thank you so much for the kind words, Matthew. I am very sorry for your loss; the weather community certainly got a little dimmer with his passing. The way to honor the legacy of Tim and his crew is to continue to rigorously study these incredible phenomena, and I know they would've enjoyed seeing the advancements to tornado science and forecasting made thanks to their work and the work of others post-El Reno. Thank you again; all of those case studies you mentioned are on my list! In fact, I'm planning on using Greensburg as my next one.
In jim bishops footage of the el reno tornado, between 16:52 and 17:00 in the video, u can see headlights about a third of the way up the tornado, move across the tornado aloft. The time was around 6:23 or so. U can see a large sub vortex on the right side of the tornado and as it wraps around u see the headlights. It takes less than 10 seconds for the vehicle to fly all the way across the main tornado. Seems to match up with the timing of a certain groups last moments. Its unreal watching the video knowing what happened at that time, especially seeing that subvortex wrapping around, just like the radar and studies show. Thank you for these videos
It amazes me that this footage doesn't get more recognition. If we assume that is a vehicle aloft, then that should be proof of ef4+ winds and damage, I believe it take ef4+ winds to keep a vehicle aloft. Thank you for these videos
Hey I have a quite stupid question. I use radarscope and I noticed in the velocity radar product I sometimes see totally black pixels. Sometimes directly adjacent to the colored ones. Are these just artifacts or where the beam gets no reflector data to display? Does velocity maps alias?
They are most likely bad pixels that were taken out during the quality control process before the end product gets displayed on the app. The data goes through extensive massaging before the final product gets released, including dealiasing velocities (we see the final product after the aliased velocities are unfolded).
@@ConvectiveChronicles Im sorry to take advantage of your time but are there any textbooks you would recommend for introing meteorology? Is there a "bible" for meteorology? You clearly understand and can effectively teach the thing. Plus you ACTUALLY respond to your subscribers. If you had any recommendations that would be amazing. Either way Im going to contribute to your channel.
@@jamessimon3433 Don't apologize! Always happy to help. As far as books/textbooks go, it depends on what your interests are within meteorology. A lot of the college textbooks out there are not that well written (speaking from experience)...If you are just starting out and want to know the absolute basics of the science of meteorology, I would start with the online NWS Jet Stream modules. They are such a simple but comprehensive intro to meteorology that anyone can understand, even with little experience: www.weather.gov/jetstream/ If you have a base understanding of weather and your interest is more severe weather/severe weather forecasting, I would start with Tim Vasquez's awesome handbook series. All of the books are great, particularly the Severe Storm Forecasting Handbook and Weather Analysis & Forecasting Handbook: www.weathergraphics.com/books/
I have a suspicion that both ascending and descending tornadogensis are possible, however, they arise from different (but similar) conditions. I also suspect that the overlap between these means that you can have the same storm potentially produce both kinds at different points in its life, as it moves into different conditions. However, from personal experience I get the impression that ascending tornadogenisis might be more common, just from experience. There's been a ton of times chasing that I have seen a swirl of dust or leaves under the mesocyclone often many minutes before any kind of tornado strength winds are present. I have no idea if this is the start of a surface vortex, or just transient concentrated vorticity, but I know I've seen it often enough that it doesn't seem like chance. I'm not *super* confident in this, and I don't know how one would begin to prove it, so I'd like to hear your thoughts on this. (Or anyone's thoughts, really.)
Completely agree! In my thesis, I analyzed four different tornado cases using high-res mobile radar data, and I found evidence of both descending and non-descending (ascending) tornadogenesis among the cases. The Putnam, OK tornadic supercell on 6-15-19 appeared to feature descending tornadogenesis, while the Elmer case appeared to feature non-descending tornadogenesis. The former case was a lower shear event, while the Elmer case was a much higher shear event. Of course, small sample size, but perhaps that has something to do with it; regardless, I do think the environment has a lot to do with the method of tornadogenesis in storms. I also agree that ascending/non-descending tornadogenesis may be more common; we just don't have a big enough data archive of tornadogenesis cases from mobile/high-res radars to make a definitive statement. But I too have seen a lot of cases out in the field where the tornado does seem to begin with concentration of vorticity near the surface which works upward with time. Very interesting stuff, and hopefully more research will be done on these topics in the future.
I’ve had math through differential equations and a lot of this analysis still makes me feel dumb lol. Great stuff though, man. The amount of work you put into it is extremely admirable and impressive.
Jim bishops footage of thr el reno tornado while he was stopped on I40 looking southwest at the tornado captures a set of headlights a few hundred feet up moving left to right all the way across the tornado and on around the back side. This would be around the time Samaras and company were hit. It's hard to see the headlights, but starting around the 16:53 mark you see the headlights blink and occasionally you see them all the way across the funnel until a little after the 17 minute mark
There’s an amazing video, which for some reason is not well known at all, of a chase group actually following Samaris and co. onto Reuter Road just moments before impact. You even see the Twistex Cobalt making the fateful crossing of US 81. These folks also turned onto Reuter, but at the last second the navigator told them to turn around. When they do, you get an unbelievable view of the 2.6 mile wide beast. It was so wide the left edge starts in the camera frame, and after they turn a full 90° the right edge came into view. Let me see if I can find a link, it’s insane
@@TheLocalLt I believe that's Dan Robinson's footage; you can see the Samaras vehicle's headlights in frame moments before they (and Dan) were impacted.
@@ConvectiveChronicles it’s not, this is another - incredibly almost unknown - video by a guy named Randy Walton, from directly behind Samaris and co. (as opposed to in front of him, like Robinson). The video contains an amazing panoramic view of the tornado and is the missing link in the El Reno puzzle. I replied again with the link shortly after, but I’m not seeing it here now so you may need to approve the comment. The video is “El Reno Tornado Escape 05/31/13” by Randy Walton.
@@ConvectiveChronicles I have learned more about the true nature of the elusive subtleties of these meteorological events here than anywhere else in the last 20 years. Bravo!
Great video here. I don't understand most of what you're discussing, but it's still always so fascinating to watch and learn a little bit and you've even sparked an interest in meteorology for me. This is something I would really enjoy to research and learn more. Do you by chance happen to have plans to do an in depth analysis of the May 20th 2013 Moore, OK EF5? I'd be very interested in seeing that one as well. I lived in Okemah, OK at this time and I remember watching both of these monsters on the news and I was just awestruck and heartbroken at the same time.
I'd be keen on eventually seeing a detailed analysis like this one that also happens to include the mesocyclone perimeter for reference. I've seen a few clips from time to time that show tornadoes that seem to more or less take their meso completely over, and a tornado reaching this width has me wondering. I'm also very curious about whether this tornado developed the classic "eye", or conspicuous area in its center of very low reflectivity, typically seen in mile+ wide tornadoes, and how the long-lasting center subvortex discussed in this video relates to that. Last thing I'll note is something that harkens back to the classic "Tornado Video Classics" video from the early 90s. A brief mention is made of "twin suction vortices" that Dr. Fujita claimed to have spotted in the film of the Xenia tornado. Well it just so happens that there's a certain clip of the El Reno tornado that legitimately and unambiguously reveals this phenomenon-a subvortex that's made of two vortices spinning around one another. I've long suspected that nobody else ever noticed this.
As someone who is currently in an atmospheric science program your videos are awesome. Wish i could've gone to OU but UGA was home. I cant wait to chase some storms soon though.
Fantastic case study. Need to re-watch but was especially interested in the early/ pre initiation stage of the storm. According to book about Tim Samaris, the OKC area was getting bombarded on a nearly daily basis with storms and potential storms ( including the EF-5 Moore a few days before). It spoke about the unease at the SPC the day before when similar conditions were observed but no tornado. So they watching closely on the 31st. They held off on issuing warnings but were in close discussion with local media and government throughout the day about "pre-warnings". And then around 3 o'clock the SPC head has his " oh shit" moment when he's outside and the wind direction shifts 30 degrees S to SW which told him the dry line had just moved. And from your video the convection cap was gone and explosive growth was,now commencing. That's actually the part I'd love to see more footage of. Again great post. Fantastic job.
Thanks so much! Yeah, this day was the end of an insanely active stretch for Oklahoma, with the Shawnee/Edmond/Carney tornadoes on May 19, the Moore EF5 on May 20, a squall line on May 21, and the threat on May 30. No wonder forecasters were uneasy, especially with these parameters coming together and the low-level winds shifting to a much more favorable setup in the afternoon.
@@ConvectiveChronicles thanks for getting back! What was, the critical difference between the 30th and 31st. It sounds,like it was almost there on Thursday- yet no one can predict it until it happens. And if it had gone off on the 30th, would it have been as powerful?
The key difference on the 30th was a slightly mistimed shortwave moving through before parameters were maximized. Some slight subsidence was noted on the back side of the trough, which kept storm coverage/sustenance at bay. There were a few storms that went up due to strong sfc heating, and there were several severe reports, but nothing like what it could’ve been. The 12 Norman sounding sampled a very intense environment with very strong shear, deep low level moisture, and strong instability. Would’ve been a significant outbreak had the shortwave been timed right.
@@ConvectiveChronicles one further thought on this. So it sounds like there was a loaded gun on the 30th, but the trigger didn't get pulled. So conditions basically remained in place overnight. Possibly slightly cooled overnight. But still the next day no guarantee it will go off until that afternoon when the dry line shifted. And with a loaded gun, conditions were ideal for large and violent storms although the scale surprised everyone. I makes me think that the theory behind tornadoes at the mathematical physics level maybe needs to incorporate something like chaos theory- how small events can have outsize effects. The Jarell tornado seems to be a similar case. The conditions weren't ideal but small anomalies produce a monster late in its life cycle. It seems that high CAPE and low wind shear were common factors. I'm wondering if there's any supercomputer modeling going on that uses chaos theory in tornado development.
I didn't realize they formed the EF scale as early as 2001. Very interesting! I get, now, why it wasn't rated an EF5. That 3 second technicality is kind of similar to how blizzards how determined.
This event is still so fascinating, didn't know about the subvortices in the anti cyclonic tornado. What a complete mess of a beast. I know monster gets thrown around frequently with large multivortex wedges, but this is IMHO a true monster. Fascinating and deeply complex, but horrifying at the same time. Maybe it's because I'm in Ontario 🇨🇦 so things like this don't happen here, but either way, this breakdown was insightful. Thanks!
Given both the 5/20 and 5/31 tornadoes did or tried in the case of the 5/20 one, occlusion loops, is there anything noteworthy that'd cause that in the geography of the OKC area and the OKC metro? I'm always fascinated by unusual tornado movements, and I thought you covered other ones in the past, I need to go check and see if you did0
Usually those loops are going to be the result of occlusion of the mesocyclone, which occurred in both the 5-20 and 5-31 cases. This paper goes into really good depth on the Moore tornado's loop and what caused it: journals.ametsoc.org/view/journals/mwre/143/7/mwr-d-14-00357.1.xml?tab_body=pdf Frictional effects from buildings and such in big cities like OKC can cause shifts in the intensity, appearance, and track of the tornado, but most of the time, loops will be caused by processes within the storm.
@@ConvectiveChronicles Ahh, the buildings don't afect it as much as I thought they did, that makes sense. For some reason I assumed buildings would have a stronger impact on the tornado itself, I'mnot sure where I got that from, probably from a poorly designed building over here that did this but on a larger scale up to and including a major wind tunnel effect. I think I just got my wires crossed with that and tornadoes being afected by buildings in big cities. That's a really interesting paper, I'll bookmark it and read it in bits
Excellent case study. Could watch mobile radar scans of tornadoes on loop for days! Haha, thanks for upload. Also, Bennington would be an interesting case. I'm guessing that deviant track was the tornado wrapping around the entire mesocyclone? Cheers!
Thank you! Bennington is on my list; that one actually attained its almost stationary/slightly retrograding motion because of advection by the low-level storm relative wind...using the deviant motion hodograph technique, the deviant tornado motion vector was literally almost at the exact center of the hodograph grid (i.e. nearly stationary motion): www.ustornadoes.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/03/20130528_2300_39.32_-97.92_RAP_23Z_F00.png
This may be a dumb question but I'm gonna ask anyway. Can major highway projects (dealing with flattening the land) in conjunction with natural weather patterns exacerbate tornadic activity? In particular I'm curious about the path most of these major tornados take in Oklahoma in regards to i44.
just thinking about bottom-up tg. In most of the cases that I can remember, being on the ground, there was a sudden ramp-up of winds before tornadogenesis. I witnessed it most prominently in the Madill tornado a few years ago. in another case, where a tornado ultimately did not form, there was no ramp-up in winds. just a steady light breeze.
Love these analyses Trey! I’ve learned more from this channel than I ever thought could be possible. Question - does it seem to you like there was an unusually high amount of positive lightning with this storm? Maybe I’m wrong, but with all the videos of El Reno I’ve seen, there just seems to be a ton of those quick bolts with that almost whip-like crack of thunder - more than any other storms I’ve seen videos of. Would love to get your thoughts!
Thanks so much! I can’t speak to anything quantifiable regarding positive lightning on that storm, but those large CAPE days often do produce some epic lightning.
@@ConvectiveChronicles yes, if I’ve learned one thing from these case studies, it’s that high CAPE/low shear is never ever to be underestimated. Thank you Trey!
I'll post this again, I absolutely love your videos and listen to all of them either on the commute or during free time Thanks for all the effort you put into these. I'm a massive fan of Cameron Nixon so I'm very happy to see him cited here. You've made me so much smarter on weather and especially tornadoes and I thank you for that. Also the obligatory "elevated mixed later" aka EML reference
Thank you so much! I always try to work in Cameron's stuff when I can, as it really makes envisioning how the wind profile relates to the environment/possible hazards easy. And haha yes, the obligatory EML reference...wouldn't be a Convective Chronicles forecast discussion or case study without a reference to EML...
Just watched a couple videos on the el Reno 2011 tornado. Both of the el Reno tornadoes had the darkest clouds with waves of rain wrapping in like an inland hurricane.
Still honestly one of the craziest tornadoes ever seen. All the video from people trying to get away from this that LITERALLY were in the circulation of this is still insane. It's lucky in a way there weren't more chasers killed but this was a tragic learning experience in a way that still should be referenced these days from chasers that you need to be on your ass at all times. All this "Zero-Meter" trend stuff last 2 years is just.....it's gonna end bad at some point as it's becoming a bad trend and someone or some people are gonna pay for it in the end. This is why when I chase I don't like getting within usually even a mile of something like this.....granted we are only in the Midwest for 1 week or so in early June each year so it's hard for us to get a proper tornado last 4 years unlike in 2010 when we went in the prime of May for 2 weeks but still, I enjoy keeping some distance. It's still nuts to me in a way seeing people try and core punch storms with obvious 3+ inch hail and strong rotation even if it's still in a embedded wall cloud.
Yeah...I like getting as close as I can, but in these types of scenarios, you just can't. Looking back, deviant tornado motion was a strong possibility, and these extreme CAPE setups just have their own rules. I have a feeling if I was chasing on this day, I wouldn't be here today.
@@ConvectiveChronicles Thanks, i found out how to get it open and draw but it wont let me clear the screen of the drawing i tried hitting backspace and it didnt do anything
You mentioned that the NWS measured a damage path at one point of 2.6 miles. Was the path continuous in it's width, or was some of the the damage within that span created by satellite tornadoes? Because as you said, a satellite tornado is a separate tornado. I guess my question is, " Was there ever an actual 2.6 mile wide funnel on the ground?
The tornado was not continuously 2.6 miles wide, but it was at its largest point. There wasn’t necessarily a funnel 2.6 miles wide at that time, but the tornadic circulation was that far across.
@@ConvectiveChronicles Yes (around 32:55). This is by far the best, most educational video i have come across, i just get a bit confused with the formula: If max outbound and inbound velocity of pixels are to be added (eg. 35 + (- 40)), shouldn't it be written with a sigma symbol? I'm sure if i came across this formula on my own without any explanations provided i would interpret delta V as a difference in those pixels (-40 - 35 = 37 or 35 - (-40) - which is also 37, OMG i understand now..i am so sorry for wasting your time. I'm on a slow side.. please ignore my comment, and thank you for this fantastic content!
@@maja2383 Thank you so much! You're definitely not wasting my time! You are actually correct; technically, delta-v-max is the difference between the maximum outbound and maximum inbound pixel. Inbounds are designated negative, so if you have a 40 mph outbound and -35 mph inbound, you'd have delta_v_max = max_inbound - max_outbound delta_v_max = (40) - (-35) = (40) + (+35) delta_v_max = 75 mph The negatives cancel out. In my explanation in the video, I kind of just used a shortcut...since we know the negatives are always going to cancel out, I just called it a sum, using the absolute value of the inbound pixel. But you are correct, it's technically a difference.
@@ConvectiveChronicles Yes i realized you used a shortcut as i was typing...it was not my intention to be petty about it, i just got a little confused there, i'm sorry. Thank you so much for the clarification. I'm blown away by your overall analysis and i'm finally beginning to understand these phenomena. Thank you! Cheers!
The straight loopty loop that the path took is so insane to me. I’m sorry if you say why it did that in the video, I’ve just started watching and haven’t got there yet! But If you don’t talk about it in the video, can you tell me what causes it to take that crazy loop of a path?
So that was the result of a "failed occlusion." Usually during an occlusion, the rear-flank gust front chokes off the tornado circulation from the warm/moist air that's feeding it, and it detaches from the parent mesocyclone. That generally means the tornado moves to the left of the mean flow and is about to die off. However, in this particular case, that didn't happen; instead, the tornado restrengthened and regained its path toward the east, as a mature tornado would do.
@@ConvectiveChronicles thank you for the answer! I couldn’t imagine being a chaser and having to deal with that and trying to plan for that. Great video as always!
As a chaser, I can tell you it can be very difficult. In these extreme CAPE scenarios, you just have to give the storm space, as all rules go out the window. Thank you again!
This is another one of your great videos that I really like looking at/I am glad that you covered the part about the floods in Oklahoma City because I had friends that while they were not affected by any tornadoes had a lot of flood damage/thank you for your hard work
@@ConvectiveChronicles Thanks for answering my question / I know you get lots of suggestions for videos, so this is not really a suggestion, but just in your spare time just to read about “ ancient” storm and tornado events, look up April 12, 1945, May 5, 1960 and May 5, 1961 / believe it or not that’s not a typo one year apart events // thanks for your kindness and expert knowledge
I just discovered something interesting about the April 12, 1945 outbreak in Oklahoma and surrounding states/that was the same day that Franklin D Roosevelt died and it mentioned the next day the papers had to balance between the headlines being about the severe weather and President Roosevelt/I am a subscriber, and “like” any of the videos I have seen
College level lectures that are entertaining and free to watch, as someone with a massive intrest in Meteorology and no desire to go to a proper university, these videos have taught me so much I never thought I would be able to learn.
Thanks for all your hard work Trey, it is much appreciated, I hope your channel will grow to whatever size you desire it to. c:
Thank you so much! I really appreciate that!
Alongside watching this you should also check out NWS Norman it's the actual National Weather Service and they have free seminars
Probably the most underrated channel still out there regarding convective breakdowns. One of these days my hope is the subscriber numbers will skyrocket
I really appreciate that; thank you!
This channel and Tim Vasquez' Forecast Lab both deserve way more than they currently get. Someone needs to teach the algorithm about quality over hype.
@@DaydreamNative Thank you! Love Tim's content; his handbooks were like the bible when I was first getting into severe wx forecasting.
@@DaydreamNative thanks for mentioning Tim, now I have a whole other channel to deep dive and learn about storms! Looks like he does some serious breakdowns with the nitty gritty like Trey does
@@lennys6059 Yeah, it's a slightly different format with a more general focus given the day to day schedule and intends to teach how to analyse your local weather yourself rather than trying to cover it all, generally not quite as in-depth or comprehensive as what Trey puts out but equally essential viewing IMO.
Imagine living in Moore and having your house destroyed on the 20th, so you go stay with friends/family in El Reno.
Lucky the elreno was open field
Imagine living in Oklahoma lol
@@yamac488explain
The 55min-65min section is totally mind-boggling information. Thank you for breaking this down for us!
This is literally the first video in years that I have put my devices down and just watched. Absolutely amazing.
Thank you so much!
Wow. I randomly looked up El Reno sub-vortices, not really expecting to find anything more than Skip Talbot's old videos, and somehow I picked the exact perfect day to do that search. Gonna give this a solid watch when I can.
Haha enjoy!
The cape values were in fact that high.
Storm chasing that day, we saw close to 6000 cape values before(i mean within 30 mins of storm initiation) and ground obs at highway 81 just south of el reno showing a strong backing wind ahead of the frontal boundary.
I have not seen since then as high of cape values with such a storm.
This storm veered southeast immediately after el reno. With the meso splitting in two. Creating a semi quasi linear line. It produced tornadoes in south okc as well.
Very dynamic and very rare.
And remember this was a week AFTER Moore took another direct ef 5.
I heard Jarrel had CAPE 7500...
Tbh I only understand about 20% of the information but these videos are so well put together and explained. For someone like me (with little to no meteorology experience) to end the video and learn something... you are talented. Thank you for the time and effort you spend on this, it's appreciated!
Thank you for the kind words!
You should look into sounding charts and jet stream maps and stuff they’re very interesting for anyone
Wow, Trey! This was absolutely fantastic!! I will have to watch this several times to ingest everything presented here. Thank you VERY much for putting this incredible case study together!!
My pleasure; thanks so much, Tal!
The best breakdown of the event! In painstaking, granular detail that many other videos miss... especially the part about the motion and speed of the main inner vortex! Astonishing!
Thank you so much!
If I could make a suggestion - the Tri-State Tornado is shrouded in a lot of mystery - documentation may not be as readily available on that storm, but I think it would be quite a piece to look at if you made an analysis of that!
Isn't it generally believed nowadays that the Tri-State was a series of tornadoes from a cyclical supercell? Or perhaps there is just not enough evidence to make any real conclusion.
i completely agree that an analysis of the tri-state tornado would be great, but without modern radar and documentation of the storm, it definitely would be a very challenging and inhibited video due to those factors
I agree; it's on my list! Only issue with those old events is the data archives are quite sparse, but I think the Tri-State Tornado has enough literature out there that I could construct a solid video on it.
Correct, it’s believed to be a tornado family rather than one long track.
@@ConvectiveChronicles Use the 2021 Quad State Supercell as a starting off point for the Tri State Storm. Because theory suggests that the 1925 Tri State Tornado was likely identical to the 2021 Kentucky Tornado.
Thanks! Thanks! I learn so much from your lectures on theses weather events.
Thank you so much; I really appreciate that! I hope to resume these case studies once things slow down weather-wise this summer.
I can watch the same video of yours multiple times and am fascinated every time. I don’t even understand 99% of what you’re talking about, but the presentation and information is so well presented it still captivates my entire attention every time. Amazing
Thank you so much!
Trey, this is an absolutely incredible breakdown. There is so much information to digest. It'll definitely warrant another watch (or two!)
What an absolute beast of a storm! My mind is blown by the anti-cyclonic multi-vortex sub vortex. I think it's amazing how there weren't even more casualties and fatalities with this storm.
Wonderful stuff Trey, keep up the groundbreaking work 👏
Thanks so much, Rhi! Thankfully this storm wasn't 30 miles east, as that would have been a worst case scenario for OKC.
I really appreciate your lectures/case studies on these tornados, they are invaluable for those of us who never stop learning. Thank you!🙏
Thank you so much!
Your channel is one of the best discoveries I've made on UA-cam in a long time. Thank you so much for all these excellent analyses!
I really appreciate that; thank you!!
Around 22:30 you talked about why the Tornado became rain wrapped. Could you explain further why weak outflow winds in the mid-level allowed for that to happen? How does stronger outflow winds cause an LP supercell? Are we talking about the RDL here? I’ve always been confused how LP vs HP supercells form and would love some clarity. Thanks in advance!
Strong storm-relative outflow winds help to push, or vent, the precipitation in the mid-levels away from the updraft/mesocyclone region of the supercell, which helps make any tornadoes that occur more visible and can yield LP supercells. In contrast, when you have weak storm-relative outflow winds, the precipitation is not vented away from the updraft/mesocyclone region of the supercell. Thus, the rain falls very close to or within the mesocyclone area of the storm, which yields a more HP storm and obstructs the view any tornado that may form.
I hope this helps; let me know if you have any other questions. You can also get some more info on these processes at the following link, just scroll down a bit to the "Storm-Relative Wind" section: cameronnixonphotography.wordpress.com/research/the-storm-relative-hodograph/
@@ConvectiveChronicles that totally makes sense, thank you so much for answering!
This might be the best one yet! Great work.
I will always remember this day, but not particularly because of El Reno. This day also had a QLCS tornado event in the St. Louis metro area with an EF-3 which went right through everyone I know and love. My grandmother, who nearly took a direct hit, was hard to reach for an hour.
However, I was so focused on STL that I had no idea what was happening in Oklahoma. But I remember the first image I saw from that day was the destroyed TWC Tornado Hunt vehicle. Since I was an avid TWC viewer, that chilled me to my bone.
Again, excellent work!
Thank you! This case study did require a lot more work because this tornado has so many unique/noteworthy facets, so I appreciate that!
Wow, I hope your grandmother came out ok. There was definitely a volatile atmosphere in place up that way, so I'm not surprised there were some strong tornadoes.
@Convective Chronicles Yeah she was fine. No one was killed or injured in the tornado.
The actual tornado went a quarter mile to her north, but their neighborhood caught the RFD surge with estimated 100mph winds which snapped several dozen trees in her neighborhood.
Wow, that’s crazy. Glad she (and everyone else) made it out ok.
I lived in STL at that time, too, and it was really scary. I’m glad your grandmother and other loved ones were ok.
i appreciate you and your sharing of these discussions and case studies. its given me a sense that i dont know a lot about meteorology, which is absolutely fun because it means i have much to learn.
so, thank you for sharing these
Is there any correlation with high cape/low shear and ascending tornadogenesis and vice versa? I think tornadogenesis can and does happen both ways depending on condition variables.
So that is one of my hypotheses. In my master's thesis, I looked at four different events w/ high-res mobile radar data. Found ascending tornadogenesis in the Elmer, OK case (shown in the video) and descending tornadogenesis in the 6-15-19 Putnam, OK case. The former was a higher shear case, while Putnam was a much weaker shear case. Obviously it's a small sample size, but there may be some merit to that hypothesis.
@@ConvectiveChronicles You should do a video on your thesis sometime! I would love to hear about it. Also do you have a link where I could read it?
@@hgbugalou That's a good idea, I might! Yes, here's a link: shareok.org/handle/11244/330737
@@hgbugalou This 2 Mile wide Monster was an unpredictable and complex Tornado. It was like it was designed to kill Storm Chasers. Twistex died because they were Unable to get to Safety when the Sub-vortices suddenly changed direction and snagged their Chevy Colbalt.
@@ConvectiveChronicles hi Trey, I was looking at your thesis paper and I was just wondering, how long does it take to research and then write those?
Absolutely beautiful work, please continue to make content like this!
Thank you!
As always I love the videos. I’ve been storm spotting for 2 years now and this year I’ve been diving deep into the meteorology and you have been a big part in that so thank you!!!
Really happy to hear that! Thank you!
Most legendary tornado probably. Thank you for covering this, gonna be great !
Thank you!
Awesome work! Love looking at these, there such a great tool to understand more severe weather concepts as I move towards my atmospheric science degree. Keep up the great work!
Thank you!!
Have always been a storm enthusiasts since I was young. Have always regretted not taking my career path in that direction. Met the twistex crew 6 or so weeks before this when I was in Denton texas. Tim and Paul both seemed like great people talked a bit and shook hands. Was watching that tornado on TV, was deeply sadend upon hearing about their incident.
Amazing work man. If you get the time, I would love to see your breakdown of the early May 2003 tornado outbreak. My hometown of Jackson, TN was struck by the 2nd of 3 (E)F4 tornadoes in just 9 years on May 4, 2003. I feel like that was a really interesting setup given the widespread and long lived nature of it. Keep up the great work!
Thanks so much! I will definitely add it to the list!
Literally was watching footage of this last night and wondered if/when you were going to cover this. Thanks so much!
Thank you for watching!
This is the best data coverage on the deadly sub vortex, I had no idea it was moving at those speeds, incredible.
Awesome video Trey! I am not a meteorologist by any means, and have not read research papers for this event, but in regards to the discussion of deviant motion and tornado width increase, a thought I am having is: could there be some relation between the average angle between the rear and forward flank downdrafts (if that's a thing) and the "width" of the inflow region (thus contributing to increase in the inflow flow rate and/or the increase in tornado width?)...or something else? In looking at the slide at about 45:00 in the video, the "average angle" I guess you could say between the main forward and rear flank downdraft seems to increase a bit from 2307:35 to 2310:44....and after 2310:44 is when the widening of the tornado happens...just a thought I had.
Thank you!
Hmmm, interesting idea, one that I haven't thought of before. My hypothesis of the mechanism behind a tornado's size change is that there's an increase in streamwise vorticity ingestion; i.e. a large area of favorable "spin" that the tornado encounters that allows for a lot more vorticity to be concentrated within the low-level mesocyclone, hence perhaps causing widening of the tornado. That source could be a streamwise vorticity current (SVC), remnant surface boundary, etc. Your theory is interesting and perhaps a lot simpler...you can also see at 45:00, the 2314:09 box has a lot larger of a "cocoon" - i.e. the area or interface between the FFD and RFD - than the previous times. Perhaps a change in that angle you mention does something to change the size of that interface, creating a larger area for the vorticity concentration within the mesocyclone to occur.
So comprehensive! Amazing work! I'll be reading those journal articles. You do a great job with these analyses! Thank you so much for your effort.
Thank you so much!
Just great stuff Trey. Thanks so much. Interestingly, the Moore tornado, eleven days earlier, did a bit of a "failed occlusion" loop as well.
Thank you! You're right; these failed occlusion cases are very interesting!
0:01 that Malta MT supercell was something else.....
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MT can get storms like that.... but not that often (especially in the last ~5 years.... everything just goes QLCS)
Yeah, that was the structure of the year for 2021. Love chasing in Montana; I've seen some incredible storms up there.
@@ConvectiveChronicles I live in glasgow/fort peck area
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I was watching the Malta storm on radar and cussing because my boss would not let me leave 4 hours early LOL
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But ya.... some crazy storms up here
Also had a storm turn 90 degrees, head straight south right over my shop
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TONS of low level rotation
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Also had quarter size hail, but they were flat... not round
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Very strange
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Lost all the pics and videos of that storm when I broke my phone sadly
@@kainhall Last year was my first experience chasing in Montana, and I loved it. Can't wait to get back up there soon.
Wonderful video. I am in no way shape or form educated at all on the meteorology of these storms, but you have a way of explaining the science behind them that is easy to comprehend while also keeping all of the crucial information in that I do not know. You've gained a new subscriber, and I will be watching to learn more. Keep up the great work.
Thank you so much for the kind words and for subscribing! Much appreciated!
Captain Clutch with the timing, I needed the distraction! Thank you!
The El Reno tornado is one of my favorite of all time, love the video! And keep up the amazing work!
Thanks so much!
My bad I thought the yellow line represents the center of the tornado not subvortex path. All those vortices popped up around Twistex. I wonder if that’s why they couldnt reverse. 1 was behind them too.
The subvortex was just moving so quickly that they had almost no time to react.
This is amazing, thank you!
Folks in the area should visit the Big Well museum in Greensburg, KS which displays an amazing retelling of the event along with some of the debris and a tower to look out at how the town changed. I definitely cried due to how real their museum made it feel. They also include the story of how they recovered which is super inspiring.
Thank you! I made my first visit to the Greensburg museum last year; it was an incredible experience. I always enjoy driving through town and seeing how far they’ve come since that fateful day.
This was fascinating. I’m glad you spent some time going over the behavior of the tornado. Seeing that info on the sub-vortices was kind of mind-blowing. And I’d not heard that the anti-cyclonic tornado was multi-vortex, too. Thanks again, I was really excited to see you’d done this case study.
Thanks so much!
Skip Talbot got video of the anti-cyclonic, it was like a mini version of the El Reno tornado, with a rotating cloud base producing several constantly changing vortices (mostly without visible condensation funnels)
I dont even know what to say. This is the best meteorolgical analysis of anything I have ever seen. It's my second video. Im blown away. I wish you did convective winter storms as that's my passion. But man, Im gobsmacked by your videos!!
Thank you so much for the kind words! I really appreciate it! I may branch out into winter wx stuff in the future.
At 52:50 u mentioned that the tornado has to deviate back to the north because the tornado initially turned south east. To my untrained eye the speeding up of the tornado happens to be at around the time it is going back up north trying to follow the apparent storm motion. can this be some something like a slingshot, since the storm base and top levels are connected and the tornado is getting pulled?
That's an interesting question that's hard to know for sure...I think the change in speed had some other factors that went into it, but that's an interesting proposition.
This is a true masterpiece. Amazing in depth analysis of so many different facets of this incredible storm. Subscribing!
Subscribed instantly....you present a very informative and interesting analysis. From an Australian Storm Chaser...Thank you for providing this content
Thank you so much!
Wow 🤯 Amazing job! Thanks for making this! This video was worth waiting for.
Thanks so much!
In the dominator footage showing the satellite vortex (40.06), another more energetic vortex (to the “right” of what you are calling the satellite vortex) is obvious. It even appears more “outside” the main circulation than the vortex you are referring to. What is that? Accepting the fact that it is another satellite vortex, what makes the leftish vortex that you are pointing to so special?
It’s very likely another subvortex…that circulation was massive
yes, and capturing it just in that one moment of time, I’m not sure which of those two vortices, or the many others that may have subsequently developed that were never witnessed, would’ve been the culprit of…..anything. I understand how incredibly difficult it is to get the proper radars, instruments, personnel, etc., in place to study such a dangerous storm, indeed, if any tornado. One thing that is often overlooked, that you allude to in this video regarding over-estimating the wind speed of this tornado, is that radar artifacts may be present. We need to understand the fact that tornado science is often working with very limited data sets, and circumstances are not easily applied to other storms in analogous situations, since there may in fact not be analogous situations to study! It is all very interesting to me. Tornado science seems to rely mostly on phenomenology with n=1, and often on forcing hypotheses to be correct, when it may be a correlation/causality misinterpretation.
At any rate, very good work, and I have learned a lot from your channel. I know just enough to be dangerous in meteorology, being a science, PhD myself. Educational and technically dense, which I enjoy.
Fantastic breakdown. So clearly articulated with so much detail.
Thanks so much!
@@ConvectiveChronicles You're welcome ;)
Love the long form content! I've watched plenty of tornado and storm related channels but you are by far my favorite. I live in central Oklahoma not but 20-30 miles from this tornado at the time. It was wild trying to find shelter as this monster was coming through
Thanks so much for the kind words! Can’t imagine what that day must’ve been like living so close to that storm; I live in Norman now and haven’t yet had a scare like that. I’m sure it’s only a matter of time.
I can't believe how much I learned from this. Very awesome video man!
Thank you so much!
Are there surface temperature/dew point or VT maps available slice by slice with the dow data? I have never seen mesonet type data with this in a map form. I'm guessing the resolution would be too sparse this zoomed in with that many frequent time slices. I've always been curious if this event could have been a psuedo warm seclusion like event we see with larger tropical systems just on a much smaller scale, namely the strengthening and loop de loop behaviour post occlusion.
Unfortunately not; the mobile radars aren’t equipped with instruments to measure those environmental variables, and there isn’t any source that measures those variables on that time scale. The Oklahoma Mesonet would be closest, but it still isn’t as high resolution, both in time and space.
@@ConvectiveChronicles Yeah I kind of figure that seeing as how you would need probes ever km or more to pick up things on this scale. Hopefully the work Leigh Orf and others are doing will allow us to plug in variables and run a model that is accurate to nature pretty soon.
Whoa the Elmer tornado was mentioned here? That was a curveball. I was working with TTU's atmospheric sciences team on that one. Cool that it was part of your thesis!
Yes! Enjoyed working with the RaXPol and MWR-05XP data from that case, was a really interesting tornado.
Thank you for another amazing video! I've learned more from you than anyone else!
Thanks so much!
That sub vortices map was horrifying! Thank you for the in depth breakdown on a tornado that seemed extremely malicious and targetted!
Just saw this on my recommendation definetly worth watching and very informative learning about how this tornado formed, its structure and what makes it not only the widdest tornado and its unusual nature.
Thank you for the kind words!
Fantastic. Best case study yet. Love the depth and explanations.
Thank you!
Could you do the Albany GA EF3 tornado? Been curious how such a strong cell remained strong in a squall line filled with short-lived rotations. Long track EF3 with a lot of size and intensity changes throughout it's life.
What was the date?
@ConvectiveChronicles Jan 22, 2017. Came from a squall line (of many that day and before) but was long track and very strong for that time of year and it not being from a discrete cell. I believe it was a strong rotating cell within the squall line. Hit mobile home parks in Albany bad. Several tornadoes and warned storm have followed nearly identical paths over time, from Leesburg south to Moultrie area. Worth County is especially a hot spot due to its height in miles and location, like NW GA counties.
@@ConvectiveChronicles I've got a few short videos of the approaching rotation and one from inside a home where it passed 1/4 from us near its widest point.
@@gl3618Ah, that's right. I do have that day on my list, but more so to analyze why the High Risk seemed to underperform in general, despite a couple stronger tornadoes like the Albany one.
@ConvectiveChronicles crazy day. I booked it from Dothan Alabama to the area of Harris road you'll read about with that tornado, 30 mins before it hit. Had reserve duty that weekend and convinced command to let us all leave a little early. Entire storm was rotating with it. I can email you the short videos I have, almost got struck just before it appeared as a wall of clay behind some trees. Sadly my video from inside is brief because we turned and went to a better place inside. Went white out conditions outside the window and we were maybe 1/4 mile from the visual funnel...that was a massive wedge.
you were discussing tornado genesis where there are two methods, one descending and one ascending. my question is, in tornado families is it more common for it to be a descending tornado genesis, or is it ascending. also is it likely that just the initial tornado in a family would be an ascending tornado, then all following tornadoes to be descending, or could there be a mix of them?
So unfortunately, those are questions we just can't answer yet. I don't think it necessarily has to do with whether or not it's a tornado family, it probably has more to do with the environment. But, we don't have enough datasets from enough storms to really know the answers. Tornadogenesis mechanisms are often only able to be resolved with high-resolution mobile radar, and I can tell you from experience, actually getting a dataset that goes from just before to just after tornadogenesis is tough. Hopefully, more research will be done on the future on this topic.
This was a fantastic analysis; I think the data used for drawn conclusions here are as good and effective at narrowing down the reason for the seemingly erratic behavior of this tornado, as what I've read from PhD mets and others. Just truly great data-backed and objective analysis.
Somewhat of a disclaimer; Tim Samaras was my biological father (discovered this truth in 2006), and I haven't been able to bring myself to study this event until a couple years ago. Once I began studying this, I could not get enough of the meteorology and the physics behind it. I know that Tim, Paul, and Carl would have wanted this type of intensive studying of the physics of this event. But thanks again for the great, data-backed analysis here and references to peer-reviewed works! Looking forward to others on the horizon including May 20, 2013 Moore OK, perhaps Greensburg KS EF5, Parkersburg IA in 2008, or even way back to the Palm Sunday Outbreak in the 60s.
Thank you so much for the kind words, Matthew. I am very sorry for your loss; the weather community certainly got a little dimmer with his passing. The way to honor the legacy of Tim and his crew is to continue to rigorously study these incredible phenomena, and I know they would've enjoyed seeing the advancements to tornado science and forecasting made thanks to their work and the work of others post-El Reno.
Thank you again; all of those case studies you mentioned are on my list! In fact, I'm planning on using Greensburg as my next one.
Man, great work as always. Thanks so much for doing these.
My pleasure; thank you!
I really enjoyed to watch this, it was like half a Case Study and half a meteorology course
Thank you; glad you enjoyed it!
In jim bishops footage of the el reno tornado, between 16:52 and 17:00 in the video, u can see headlights about a third of the way up the tornado, move across the tornado aloft. The time was around 6:23 or so. U can see a large sub vortex on the right side of the tornado and as it wraps around u see the headlights. It takes less than 10 seconds for the vehicle to fly all the way across the main tornado. Seems to match up with the timing of a certain groups last moments. Its unreal watching the video knowing what happened at that time, especially seeing that subvortex wrapping around, just like the radar and studies show. Thank you for these videos
Yeah, that footage is pretty crazy. Can't say for sure whether that is the Samaras group's vehicle or not, but evidence does suggest that it could be.
It amazes me that this footage doesn't get more recognition. If we assume that is a vehicle aloft, then that should be proof of ef4+ winds and damage, I believe it take ef4+ winds to keep a vehicle aloft. Thank you for these videos
Hey I have a quite stupid question. I use radarscope and I noticed in the velocity radar product I sometimes see totally black pixels. Sometimes directly adjacent to the colored ones. Are these just artifacts or where the beam gets no reflector data to display? Does velocity maps alias?
They are most likely bad pixels that were taken out during the quality control process before the end product gets displayed on the app. The data goes through extensive massaging before the final product gets released, including dealiasing velocities (we see the final product after the aliased velocities are unfolded).
@@ConvectiveChronicles Im sorry to take advantage of your time but are there any textbooks you would recommend for introing meteorology? Is there a "bible" for meteorology? You clearly understand and can effectively teach the thing. Plus you ACTUALLY respond to your subscribers. If you had any recommendations that would be amazing. Either way Im going to contribute to your channel.
@@jamessimon3433 Don't apologize! Always happy to help. As far as books/textbooks go, it depends on what your interests are within meteorology. A lot of the college textbooks out there are not that well written (speaking from experience)...If you are just starting out and want to know the absolute basics of the science of meteorology, I would start with the online NWS Jet Stream modules. They are such a simple but comprehensive intro to meteorology that anyone can understand, even with little experience: www.weather.gov/jetstream/
If you have a base understanding of weather and your interest is more severe weather/severe weather forecasting, I would start with Tim Vasquez's awesome handbook series. All of the books are great, particularly the Severe Storm Forecasting Handbook and Weather Analysis & Forecasting Handbook: www.weathergraphics.com/books/
I have a suspicion that both ascending and descending tornadogensis are possible, however, they arise from different (but similar) conditions. I also suspect that the overlap between these means that you can have the same storm potentially produce both kinds at different points in its life, as it moves into different conditions.
However, from personal experience I get the impression that ascending tornadogenisis might be more common, just from experience. There's been a ton of times chasing that I have seen a swirl of dust or leaves under the mesocyclone often many minutes before any kind of tornado strength winds are present. I have no idea if this is the start of a surface vortex, or just transient concentrated vorticity, but I know I've seen it often enough that it doesn't seem like chance.
I'm not *super* confident in this, and I don't know how one would begin to prove it, so I'd like to hear your thoughts on this. (Or anyone's thoughts, really.)
Completely agree! In my thesis, I analyzed four different tornado cases using high-res mobile radar data, and I found evidence of both descending and non-descending (ascending) tornadogenesis among the cases. The Putnam, OK tornadic supercell on 6-15-19 appeared to feature descending tornadogenesis, while the Elmer case appeared to feature non-descending tornadogenesis. The former case was a lower shear event, while the Elmer case was a much higher shear event. Of course, small sample size, but perhaps that has something to do with it; regardless, I do think the environment has a lot to do with the method of tornadogenesis in storms. I also agree that ascending/non-descending tornadogenesis may be more common; we just don't have a big enough data archive of tornadogenesis cases from mobile/high-res radars to make a definitive statement. But I too have seen a lot of cases out in the field where the tornado does seem to begin with concentration of vorticity near the surface which works upward with time. Very interesting stuff, and hopefully more research will be done on these topics in the future.
I’ve had math through differential equations and a lot of this analysis still makes me feel dumb lol. Great stuff though, man. The amount of work you put into it is extremely admirable and impressive.
Thank you for the kind words!
Oof, diff eq
Absolutely incredible breakdown. I learned a ton and appreciated this. Thanks, Trey!
Thanks so much, Lori!
Jim bishops footage of thr el reno tornado while he was stopped on I40 looking southwest at the tornado captures a set of headlights a few hundred feet up moving left to right all the way across the tornado and on around the back side. This would be around the time Samaras and company were hit. It's hard to see the headlights, but starting around the 16:53 mark you see the headlights blink and occasionally you see them all the way across the funnel until a little after the 17 minute mark
Yes, I’ve seen that video. Hard to say definitely but the evidence does somewhat support those being the Samaras vehicle.
There’s an amazing video, which for some reason is not well known at all, of a chase group actually following Samaris and co. onto Reuter Road just moments before impact. You even see the Twistex Cobalt making the fateful crossing of US 81. These folks also turned onto Reuter, but at the last second the navigator told them to turn around. When they do, you get an unbelievable view of the 2.6 mile wide beast. It was so wide the left edge starts in the camera frame, and after they turn a full 90° the right edge came into view. Let me see if I can find a link, it’s insane
@@TheLocalLt I believe that's Dan Robinson's footage; you can see the Samaras vehicle's headlights in frame moments before they (and Dan) were impacted.
@@ConvectiveChronicles it’s not, this is another - incredibly almost unknown - video by a guy named Randy Walton, from directly behind Samaris and co. (as opposed to in front of him, like Robinson). The video contains an amazing panoramic view of the tornado and is the missing link in the El Reno puzzle.
I replied again with the link shortly after, but I’m not seeing it here now so you may need to approve the comment. The video is “El Reno Tornado Escape 05/31/13” by Randy Walton.
@@TheLocalLt Ah, I know Randy well! I will check it out, thank you.
Superb work. Best analysis on the web. Much appreciated.
Thank you!
@@ConvectiveChronicles I have learned more about the true nature of the elusive subtleties of these meteorological events here than anywhere else in the last 20 years. Bravo!
@@g.f.9862 That really means a lot, thank you!
This content is INCREDIBLE.. This channel is incredible, SUPER glad I came across this channel.. I’m hooked..just.. wow!
Thank you so much for the kind words!
@@ConvectiveChronicles and thank you!!!
Great video here. I don't understand most of what you're discussing, but it's still always so fascinating to watch and learn a little bit and you've even sparked an interest in meteorology for me. This is something I would really enjoy to research and learn more.
Do you by chance happen to have plans to do an in depth analysis of the May 20th 2013 Moore, OK EF5? I'd be very interested in seeing that one as well. I lived in Okemah, OK at this time and I remember watching both of these monsters on the news and I was just awestruck and heartbroken at the same time.
Thank you! So happy to hear the videos have gotten you interested in meteorology! Yes, the Moore event is high on my list.
@@ConvectiveChronicles that's awesome to hear, I'll definitely be looking forward to it. Thank you sir!
I'd be keen on eventually seeing a detailed analysis like this one that also happens to include the mesocyclone perimeter for reference. I've seen a few clips from time to time that show tornadoes that seem to more or less take their meso completely over, and a tornado reaching this width has me wondering. I'm also very curious about whether this tornado developed the classic "eye", or conspicuous area in its center of very low reflectivity, typically seen in mile+ wide tornadoes, and how the long-lasting center subvortex discussed in this video relates to that.
Last thing I'll note is something that harkens back to the classic "Tornado Video Classics" video from the early 90s. A brief mention is made of "twin suction vortices" that Dr. Fujita claimed to have spotted in the film of the Xenia tornado. Well it just so happens that there's a certain clip of the El Reno tornado that legitimately and unambiguously reveals this phenomenon-a subvortex that's made of two vortices spinning around one another. I've long suspected that nobody else ever noticed this.
As someone who is currently in an atmospheric science program your videos are awesome. Wish i could've gone to OU but UGA was home. I cant wait to chase some storms soon though.
Thank you! Many good storm chasing opportunities ahead!
Fantastic case study. Need to re-watch but was especially interested in the early/ pre initiation stage of the storm. According to book about Tim Samaris, the OKC area was getting bombarded on a nearly daily basis with storms and potential storms ( including the EF-5 Moore a few days before). It spoke about the unease at the SPC the day before when similar conditions were observed but no tornado. So they watching closely on the 31st. They held off on issuing warnings but were in close discussion with local media and government throughout the day about "pre-warnings". And then around 3 o'clock the SPC head has his " oh shit" moment when he's outside and the wind direction shifts 30 degrees S to SW which told him the dry line had just moved. And from your video the convection cap was gone and explosive growth was,now commencing. That's actually the part I'd love to see more footage of. Again great post. Fantastic job.
Thanks so much! Yeah, this day was the end of an insanely active stretch for Oklahoma, with the Shawnee/Edmond/Carney tornadoes on May 19, the Moore EF5 on May 20, a squall line on May 21, and the threat on May 30. No wonder forecasters were uneasy, especially with these parameters coming together and the low-level winds shifting to a much more favorable setup in the afternoon.
@@ConvectiveChronicles thanks for getting back! What was, the critical difference between the 30th and 31st. It sounds,like it was almost there on Thursday- yet no one can predict it until it happens. And if it had gone off on the 30th, would it have been as powerful?
The key difference on the 30th was a slightly mistimed shortwave moving through before parameters were maximized. Some slight subsidence was noted on the back side of the trough, which kept storm coverage/sustenance at bay. There were a few storms that went up due to strong sfc heating, and there were several severe reports, but nothing like what it could’ve been. The 12 Norman sounding sampled a very intense environment with very strong shear, deep low level moisture, and strong instability. Would’ve been a significant outbreak had the shortwave been timed right.
@@ConvectiveChronicles thanks again! Shows why tornados are so difficult to predict and analyze. Lotsa moving parts that have to be in synch.
@@ConvectiveChronicles one further thought on this. So it sounds like there was a loaded gun on the 30th, but the trigger didn't get pulled. So conditions basically remained in place overnight. Possibly slightly cooled overnight. But still the next day no guarantee it will go off until that afternoon when the dry line shifted. And with a loaded gun, conditions were ideal for large and violent storms although the scale surprised everyone. I makes me think that the theory behind tornadoes at the mathematical physics level maybe needs to incorporate something like chaos theory- how small events can have outsize effects. The Jarell tornado seems to be a similar case. The conditions weren't ideal but small anomalies produce a monster late in its life cycle. It seems that high CAPE and low wind shear were common factors. I'm wondering if there's any supercomputer modeling going on that uses chaos theory in tornado development.
I didn't realize they formed the EF scale as early as 2001. Very interesting! I get, now, why it wasn't rated an EF5. That 3 second technicality is kind of similar to how blizzards how determined.
This event is still so fascinating, didn't know about the subvortices in the anti cyclonic tornado. What a complete mess of a beast. I know monster gets thrown around frequently with large multivortex wedges, but this is IMHO a true monster. Fascinating and deeply complex, but horrifying at the same time. Maybe it's because I'm in Ontario 🇨🇦 so things like this don't happen here, but either way, this breakdown was insightful. Thanks!
Thank you! I agree; this tornado was an absolute monster.
Given both the 5/20 and 5/31 tornadoes did or tried in the case of the 5/20 one, occlusion loops, is there anything noteworthy that'd cause that in the geography of the OKC area and the OKC metro? I'm always fascinated by unusual tornado movements, and I thought you covered other ones in the past, I need to go check and see if you did0
Usually those loops are going to be the result of occlusion of the mesocyclone, which occurred in both the 5-20 and 5-31 cases. This paper goes into really good depth on the Moore tornado's loop and what caused it: journals.ametsoc.org/view/journals/mwre/143/7/mwr-d-14-00357.1.xml?tab_body=pdf
Frictional effects from buildings and such in big cities like OKC can cause shifts in the intensity, appearance, and track of the tornado, but most of the time, loops will be caused by processes within the storm.
@@ConvectiveChronicles Ahh, the buildings don't afect it as much as I thought they did, that makes sense. For some reason I assumed buildings would have a stronger impact on the tornado itself, I'mnot sure where I got that from, probably from a poorly designed building over here that did this but on a larger scale up to and including a major wind tunnel effect. I think I just got my wires crossed with that and tornadoes being afected by buildings in big cities.
That's a really interesting paper, I'll bookmark it and read it in bits
Oh goodie! Goodie! Haven't even watched yet and am excited! I'm going to take time to view and absorb! Thanks Trey!
Thank you; enjoy!
Excellent case study. Could watch mobile radar scans of tornadoes on loop for days! Haha, thanks for upload. Also, Bennington would be an interesting case. I'm guessing that deviant track was the tornado wrapping around the entire mesocyclone? Cheers!
Thank you! Bennington is on my list; that one actually attained its almost stationary/slightly retrograding motion because of advection by the low-level storm relative wind...using the deviant motion hodograph technique, the deviant tornado motion vector was literally almost at the exact center of the hodograph grid (i.e. nearly stationary motion): www.ustornadoes.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/03/20130528_2300_39.32_-97.92_RAP_23Z_F00.png
This may be a dumb question but I'm gonna ask anyway.
Can major highway projects (dealing with flattening the land) in conjunction with natural weather patterns exacerbate tornadic activity?
In particular I'm curious about the path most of these major tornados take in Oklahoma in regards to i44.
No, that’s (as far as we know) mostly a coincidence.
I was literally just looking for something about El Reno to watch 15 min ago
just thinking about bottom-up tg. In most of the cases that I can remember, being on the ground, there was a sudden ramp-up of winds before tornadogenesis. I witnessed it most prominently in the Madill tornado a few years ago. in another case, where a tornado ultimately did not form, there was no ramp-up in winds. just a steady light breeze.
Thanks for another awesome video Trey!!
You bet, thanks for watching!
Amazing vid, best yet Trey!
Thanks so much!
This channel is a gold mine 🙌🤜🏽🤛🏽
Thank you!!
36:00 I've witnessed this several times on the exact same festival. Maybe it's the same phenomenon which is needed for an ascending tornadogenesis.
ua-cam.com/video/CdjhnO7cLQI/v-deo.html
Love these analyses Trey! I’ve learned more from this channel than I ever thought could be possible. Question - does it seem to you like there was an unusually high amount of positive lightning with this storm? Maybe I’m wrong, but with all the videos of El Reno I’ve seen, there just seems to be a ton of those quick bolts with that almost whip-like crack of thunder - more than any other storms I’ve seen videos of. Would love to get your thoughts!
Thanks so much! I can’t speak to anything quantifiable regarding positive lightning on that storm, but those large CAPE days often do produce some epic lightning.
@@ConvectiveChronicles yes, if I’ve learned one thing from these case studies, it’s that high CAPE/low shear is never ever to be underestimated. Thank you Trey!
I have a presentation on this for a final In a couple days and oh my gosh thank you I’ve been looking everywhere for something
Best of luck!
I'll post this again, I absolutely love your videos and listen to all of them either on the commute or during free time
Thanks for all the effort you put into these. I'm a massive fan of Cameron Nixon so I'm very happy to see him cited here.
You've made me so much smarter on weather and especially tornadoes and I thank you for that.
Also the obligatory "elevated mixed later" aka EML reference
Thank you so much! I always try to work in Cameron's stuff when I can, as it really makes envisioning how the wind profile relates to the environment/possible hazards easy. And haha yes, the obligatory EML reference...wouldn't be a Convective Chronicles forecast discussion or case study without a reference to EML...
I miss that video that showed all the footage of the separate storm chasers, it had mesmerizing shots. Did they ban it?? I cant find it....
I'm not sure; could be a copyright issue if it's an aggregation of a bunch of others' videos
Just watched a couple videos on the el Reno 2011 tornado. Both of the el Reno tornadoes had the darkest clouds with waves of rain wrapping in like an inland hurricane.
I've seen video of this one. Outside the subvortices, how come it's hard to tell one is actually inside the tornado?
Is it because of the shear size?
Yeah, it was just so big with such a wide wind field that it was hard to tell.
amazing discussion, more information that i previously had not heard about
Thank you!
Still honestly one of the craziest tornadoes ever seen. All the video from people trying to get away from this that LITERALLY were in the circulation of this is still insane. It's lucky in a way there weren't more chasers killed but this was a tragic learning experience in a way that still should be referenced these days from chasers that you need to be on your ass at all times. All this "Zero-Meter" trend stuff last 2 years is just.....it's gonna end bad at some point as it's becoming a bad trend and someone or some people are gonna pay for it in the end. This is why when I chase I don't like getting within usually even a mile of something like this.....granted we are only in the Midwest for 1 week or so in early June each year so it's hard for us to get a proper tornado last 4 years unlike in 2010 when we went in the prime of May for 2 weeks but still, I enjoy keeping some distance.
It's still nuts to me in a way seeing people try and core punch storms with obvious 3+ inch hail and strong rotation even if it's still in a embedded wall cloud.
Yeah...I like getting as close as I can, but in these types of scenarios, you just can't. Looking back, deviant tornado motion was a strong possibility, and these extreme CAPE setups just have their own rules. I have a feeling if I was chasing on this day, I wouldn't be here today.
@@ConvectiveChronicles I chase locally In eastern pa and it is a nightmare chasing wouldn’t core punch for a thousand dollars
With this initial southeasterly track, I find it hard to believe that this tornado strengthened with purely crosswise vorticity at the surface
Great discussion trey I love these briefings
Thank you!
Awesome👍🙂 case study. I remember this one very well, it occurred on the day before I graduated school.
Thank you! Yeah, this event is hard to forget...a lot of non-weather people I know even know about it.
Does Anyone know the Drawing tool he uses?, Amazing video
Thank you! I use a Wacom Intuos Tablet and a Mac app called Presentify to draw on the screen.
@@ConvectiveChronicles My Pleasure, Is Presentify Easy to Use?
Very easy. I just press control-A once it’s open and the drawing tool pops up.
@@ConvectiveChronicles Thanks, i found out how to get it open and draw but it wont let me clear the screen of the drawing i tried hitting backspace and it didnt do anything
Hmm, the delete button works for me. You can always hit control-A again to close the app and then reopen it.
You mentioned that the NWS measured a damage path at one point of 2.6 miles. Was the path continuous in it's width, or was some of the the damage within that span created by satellite tornadoes? Because as you said, a satellite tornado is a separate tornado. I guess my question is, " Was there ever an actual 2.6 mile wide funnel on the ground?
The tornado was not continuously 2.6 miles wide, but it was at its largest point. There wasn’t necessarily a funnel 2.6 miles wide at that time, but the tornadic circulation was that far across.
Isn't delta supposed to mark a difference between two values and sigma is used for summation? (referring to pseudo vorticity)
Are you referring to how delta-v-max is calculated within the pseudovorticity equation?
@@ConvectiveChronicles Yes (around 32:55). This is by far the best, most educational video i have come across, i just get a bit confused with the formula: If max outbound and inbound velocity of pixels are to be added (eg. 35 + (- 40)), shouldn't it be written with a sigma symbol? I'm sure if i came across this formula on my own without any explanations provided i would interpret delta V as a difference in those pixels (-40 - 35 = 37 or 35 - (-40) - which is also 37, OMG i understand now..i am so sorry for wasting your time. I'm on a slow side.. please ignore my comment, and thank you for this fantastic content!
@@maja2383 Thank you so much! You're definitely not wasting my time! You are actually correct; technically, delta-v-max is the difference between the maximum outbound and maximum inbound pixel. Inbounds are designated negative, so if you have a 40 mph outbound and -35 mph inbound, you'd have
delta_v_max = max_inbound - max_outbound
delta_v_max = (40) - (-35) = (40) + (+35)
delta_v_max = 75 mph
The negatives cancel out. In my explanation in the video, I kind of just used a shortcut...since we know the negatives are always going to cancel out, I just called it a sum, using the absolute value of the inbound pixel. But you are correct, it's technically a difference.
@@ConvectiveChronicles Yes i realized you used a shortcut as i was typing...it was not my intention to be petty about it, i just got a little confused there, i'm sorry. Thank you so much for the clarification. I'm blown away by your overall analysis and i'm finally beginning to understand these phenomena. Thank you! Cheers!
Thank you for the kind words!
The straight loopty loop that the path took is so insane to me. I’m sorry if you say why it did that in the video, I’ve just started watching and haven’t got there yet! But If you don’t talk about it in the video, can you tell me what causes it to take that crazy loop of a path?
So that was the result of a "failed occlusion." Usually during an occlusion, the rear-flank gust front chokes off the tornado circulation from the warm/moist air that's feeding it, and it detaches from the parent mesocyclone. That generally means the tornado moves to the left of the mean flow and is about to die off. However, in this particular case, that didn't happen; instead, the tornado restrengthened and regained its path toward the east, as a mature tornado would do.
@@ConvectiveChronicles thank you for the answer! I couldn’t imagine being a chaser and having to deal with that and trying to plan for that. Great video as always!
As a chaser, I can tell you it can be very difficult. In these extreme CAPE scenarios, you just have to give the storm space, as all rules go out the window.
Thank you again!
Fantastic job, I learnt heaps
Thank you!
This is another one of your great videos that I really like looking at/I am glad that you covered the part about the floods in Oklahoma City because I had friends that while they were not affected by any tornadoes had a lot of flood damage/thank you for your hard work
Thank you so much! Yeah, the flooding was perhaps even more impactful than the actual tornadoes.
@@ConvectiveChronicles
Thanks for answering my question /
I know you get lots of suggestions for videos, so this is not really a suggestion, but just in your spare time just to read about “ ancient” storm and tornado events, look up April 12, 1945, May 5, 1960 and May 5, 1961 / believe it or not that’s not a typo one year apart events // thanks for your kindness and expert knowledge
@@joseph-frankbrocchus6575I will check those events out; thank you!
I just discovered something interesting about the April 12, 1945 outbreak in Oklahoma and surrounding states/that was the same day that Franklin D Roosevelt died and it mentioned the next day the papers had to balance between the headlines being about the severe weather and President Roosevelt/I am a subscriber, and “like” any of the videos I have seen
@@joseph-frankbrocchus6575Wow, that's pretty crazy!
Loving the case studies! Very informative 😊
Happy to hear that; thank you!