Thank you for elaborating on the different traces for the NWS sounding, Trey! This is going to be yet another "note-taking extravaganza", lol! So grateful for the work you put into the meteorology education for us. It is ALWAYS appreciated!!! Stay safe, Trey...P.S. Glad Cameron caught your post so to add to his revamped site!! Pretty cool...
You must be from Arkansas…this sounding was from the December 10, 2021, quad-state tornadic supercell event. Provided a good example for every parameter I needed to go over.
Thank you! No, the omega bars are only for storm-scale vertical motion, as opposed to synoptic scale lift. The way to determine synoptic scale lift via soundings is to compare how much the cap is lifted/cooled between two consecutive soundings (e.g. 12z and 28z).
@@ConvectiveChronicles I think the next few videos are going to help me alot! Because I am mostly wanting to learn this stuff to tell how likely severe weather will be on a day and what kind of severe weather it'll be!
@@peachxtaehyung For sure; these next few videos will go through every box and every parameter plotted on the soundings I use in my videos and the ones that you're most likely to use when making a forecast.
Thank you for elaborating on the different traces for the NWS sounding, Trey! This is going to be yet another "note-taking extravaganza", lol! So grateful for the work you put into the meteorology education for us. It is ALWAYS appreciated!!! Stay safe, Trey...P.S. Glad Cameron caught your post so to add to his revamped site!! Pretty cool...
My pleasure; thank you! Cameron is awesome; his hodograph stuff is by far and away the best you can find.
You like using the sounding from my state.
You must be from Arkansas…this sounding was from the December 10, 2021, quad-state tornadic supercell event. Provided a good example for every parameter I needed to go over.
@@ConvectiveChronicles yep. I am.
@@ConvectiveChronicles If I haven't told you already I love your videos.
@@mforrest85 Thanks so much!
Awesome video, thank you! Can you also use the omega bars to estimate if there is enough synoptic scale lift to overcome CIN in a particular case?
Thank you! No, the omega bars are only for storm-scale vertical motion, as opposed to synoptic scale lift. The way to determine synoptic scale lift via soundings is to compare how much the cap is lifted/cooled between two consecutive soundings (e.g. 12z and 28z).
Great video thank you!!
You bet; thank you!
@@ConvectiveChronicles I think the next few videos are going to help me alot! Because I am mostly wanting to learn this stuff to tell how likely severe weather will be on a day and what kind of severe weather it'll be!
@@peachxtaehyung For sure; these next few videos will go through every box and every parameter plotted on the soundings I use in my videos and the ones that you're most likely to use when making a forecast.
Wonderful video
Thank you!
Awesome video. 🙂👍
Thank you!
@@ConvectiveChronicles Your welcome.