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SCIENCE NEWS ONLINE
The Weekly Newsmagazine of Science

Volume 155, Number 20 (May 15, 1999)

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Oklahoma Tornado Sets Wind RecordReferences

By R. Monastersky

Doppler image
Doppler radar picture of one of the Oklahoma tornadoes on May 3. (Bluestein and Pazmany)

Tornado-chasing scientists in Oklahoma last week measured wind speeds of 318 miles per hour, the highest ever documented on Earth. These radar observations, which still must be verified, also captured the birth of a tornado and will help researchers unravel the conditions that spawn such killer storms.

"It's really fascinating watching this tornado come together. That was the first time we were positioned so well with the radar to get these data," says Joshua Wurman, an atmospheric scientist at the University of Oklahoma in Norman. Wurman and his team used two Doppler radars mounted on separate trucks to study the tornadoes that ravaged the Oklahoma City area on May 3.

The Doppler radars, cousins of police radar guns, gauge wind speed by shooting pulses of microwaves that reflect off rain, dust, and other objects in the air (SN: 6/22/96, p. 388). The new wind speed measurement by one of Wurman's radars shatters the previous record of 286 mph, taken during a 1991 tornado by atmospheric scientist Howard B. Bluestein of the University of Oklahoma. He had used a more primitive Doppler radar.

"If this measurement holds up, it will be a remarkable thing," says Joseph H. Golden, a research meteorologist with the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration in Silver Spring, Md. He cautions, though, that "everybody has to be careful until people have a chance to sift through these data."

The Doppler radars measure winds more than 65 feet above the ground, making it difficult to compare these data with the Fujita scale, used to assess tornado damage to houses and other objects on the ground, says Wurman. The strongest documented tornadoes, designated F-5, carry frame houses considerable distances, send automobiles flying, and strip the bark off trees.

The late Tetsuya Theodore Fujita, who designed the scale, estimated that F-5 tornadoes have wind speeds of 261 to 318 mph just above the surface. Meteorologists, however, consider these numbers only rough guides. "The F scale has never been well calibrated, particularly at the F-4 and F-5 damage categories," says Golden.

Last week's record winds will help scientists probe the speed limits of the atmosphere, where friction and other forces put the brakes on flowing air, says Wurman. "There have always been questions about how high wind speeds could get."

Before recording the top wind speed, Wurman's team captured the birth of this violent tornado, which eventually passed through Oklahoma City. The researchers observed the storm for 8 minutes before the tornado's birth and then documented the first 6 minutes of its life.

Tornadoes develop when winds high above the ground flow at a different speed than winds near the surface, causing the air to roll along a horizontal axis, like the wheels of a car. If a thunderstorm is brewing at the same time, updrafts and downdrafts can tilt the rolling winds so that they spin around a vertical axis, setting a broad region of the storm slowly rotating. Meteorologists call such a storm a mesocyclone.

"What's not well understood is how the mesocyclone then spawns a tornado," says Wurman.

The data collected last week are expected to shed some light on that process and others, as different teams analyze their gigabytes of measurements. Bluestein and his coworkers studied some of the same Oklahoma storms using a Doppler radar with much higher resolution, designed by Andrew L. Pazmany of the University of Massachusetts at Amherst. "These are the highest-resolution images anyone's ever gotten inside a tornado," says Bluestein.

Further Readings:

Monastersky, R. 1996. Radar catches a tornado in the act. Science News 149(June 22):388.

Further information about the tornadoes can be obtained from the National Severe Storms Laboratory's Web site at http://www.nssl.noaa.gov.

Tornado images taken by the University of Massachusetts/Oklahoma University team are at http://abyss.ecs.umass.edu/tornado.

Sources:

Howard B. Bluestein
University of Oklahoma
Meteorology Department
Norman, OK 93019-0628

Joseph H. Golden
National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration
1315 East-West Highway
11554 SSMC3
Silver Spring, MD 20910

Joshua Wurman
University of Oklahoma
Meteorology Department
Norman, OK 93019-0628

From Science News, Vol. 155, No. 20, May 15, 1999, p. 308. Copyright © 1999, Science Service.


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