A34D-05
On the Environment of Supercells That Produce Anticyclonic-Cyclonic Tornado Pairs
Wednesday, 16 December 2015: 17:00
3006 (Moscone West)
Howard B Bluestein, University of Oklahoma Norman Campus, Norman, OK, United States, Jeffrey Snyder, National Severe Storms Lab Norman, Norman, OK, United States and Jana Houser, Ohio University, Geography, Athens, OH, United States
Abstract:
Anticyclonic tornadoes in supercells are very rare events, which have been documented in anticyclonically rotating, left-moving supercells in the Northern Hemisphere. It is well known that anticyclonic supercells, which can spawn anticyclonic tornadoes, form in an environment in which the vertical shear vector turns in a counterclockwise manner with height. Less rare, however, are anticyclonic tornadoes that appear in cyclonically rotating, right-moving supercells. When these anticyclonic tornadoes have been documented, they have occurred in tandem with a cyclonic tornado or intense mesocyclone. In this talk we will present Doppler radar documentation and photographs and videos of anticyclonic-cyclonic tornado pairs. We will then describe the environmental conditions under which they occur, with emphasis on any special conditions that observationally seem to favor their development.