Lightning during two central US winter precipitation events

被引:0
|
作者
Holle, RL
Watson, AI
机构
[1] Natl. Severe Storms Laboratory/NOAA, Norman, OK
[2] National Severe Storms Laboratory, NOAA, Norman, OK 73069
关键词
D O I
10.1175/1520-0434(1996)011<0599:LDTCUW>2.0.CO;2
中图分类号
P4 [大气科学(气象学)];
学科分类号
0706 ; 070601 ;
摘要
Network-detected cloud-to-ground lightning coincident with mainly frozen precipitation (freezing rain, sleet, snow) was studied over the central United States during two outbreaks of arctic air in January 1994. During the first event, the ratio of positive to total flashes was 59%, flashes were few and disorganized in area, and no surface observer reported thunder. For the other event the ratio was 52% during the first few hours in subfreezing surface air, then decreased when flashes formed in the nearby region above freezing. Also, flashes in this case were linearly aligned and coincided with conditional symmetric instability; thunder was heard infrequently by surface observers. On radar, reflectivity cores grew from weak to moderate intensity within a few hours of the lightning during both cases. Echo area increased greatly before flashes in one case, while the area increase coincided with flashes in the other. Some base-scan reflectivities were strong in both thunderstorm regions due to the radar beam intersecting the melting level. Regions with lightning often could be identified better by high echo tops than reflectivity. Analyses on the scale of one or two states diagnosed the strength of low-level warming that contributed to formation of thunderstorms and significant frozen precipitation. Quasigeostrophic analyses showed that 850-mb temperature advection and 850-500-mb differential vorticity advection were similar in magnitude in the lightning area during both events. Once convection formed, lightning and echo-top information identified downstream regions with a potential for subsequent frozen precipitation.
引用
收藏
页码:599 / 614
页数:16
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [21] Analyses of summer lightning activity and precipitation in the Central and Eastern Mediterranean
    Petrova, S.
    Mitzeva, R.
    Kotroni, V.
    Latham, J.
    Peneva, E.
    ATMOSPHERIC RESEARCH, 2009, 91 (2-4) : 453 - 458
  • [22] Role of polar vortex weakening in cold events in central Asia during late winter
    Kim, Seong-Joong
    Choi, Hye-Sun
    POLAR SCIENCE, 2021, 30
  • [23] Lightning-Induced Electron Precipitation Events Observed at Low Altitudes
    Linzmayer, V.
    Nemec, F.
    Santolik, O.
    Kolmasova, I.
    JOURNAL OF GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH-SPACE PHYSICS, 2025, 130 (04)
  • [24] Lightning Evolution In Two North Central Florida Summer Multicell Storms and Three Winter/Spring Frontal Storms
    Caicedo, J. A.
    Uman, M. A.
    Pilkey, J. T.
    JOURNAL OF GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH-ATMOSPHERES, 2018, 123 (02) : 1155 - 1178
  • [25] Oxygen isotopic composition of winter precipitation in central Japan
    Suzuki, K
    Endo, Y
    JOURNAL OF GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH-ATMOSPHERES, 2001, 106 (D7): : 7243 - 7249
  • [26] Precipitation regimes during cold-season inverted trough cases in the central US
    Weisman, RA
    McGregor, KG
    Schumacher, PN
    16TH CONFERENCE ON WEATHER ANALYSIS AND FORECASTING / SYMPOSIUM ON THE RESEARCH FOCI OF THE U.S. WEATHER RESEARCH PROGRAM, 1998, : 374 - 376
  • [27] Spatial Structure of Lightning and Precipitation Associated with Lightning-Caused Wildfires in the Central to Eastern United States
    Vant-Hull, Brian
    Koshak, William
    FIRE-SWITZERLAND, 2023, 6 (07):
  • [28] Covariabilities of winter US precipitation and Pacific Sea surface temperatures
    Wang, H
    Ting, MF
    JOURNAL OF CLIMATE, 2000, 13 (20) : 3711 - 3719
  • [29] Trends in heavy precipitation events over the continental US
    Kunkel, KE
    Andsager, K
    Easterling, DR
    NINTH SYMPOSIUM ON GLOBAL CHANGE STUDIES, 1998, : 152 - 155
  • [30] Trends in heavy precipitation events over the continental US
    Kunkel, KE
    Andsager, K
    Easterling, DR
    10TH CONFERENCE ON APPLIED CLIMATOLOGY, 1997, : 267 - 270