Once again the state of Iowa has upset the chasing community with its' lack of cooperation over the past two days. Two straight days of moderate risk, and two straight days of utter disappointment for any storm chaser that was in the state. Both setups featured their own caveats, and both featured the opportunities for greatness, but both days have their caveats win out with no tornado reports and perhaps the highlight of a shelf cloud and some impressive winds this afternoon in southeast Iowa.
Thursday's setup featured a warm front which pushed well north of the state, leaving the state under a heavy capping inhibition between 850 hPa and 700 hPa. With no warm front to help trigger thunderstorms, only a weak remnant outflow boundary had an opportunity for greatness. Although it tried with several cumulus fields attempting to bubble up through the capping inversion, none would ever succeed. Thus, tack a point up for capping inversions with 12C temperatures at 700 hPa over Iowa as a bad chase day.
Today's (Friday) setup finally featured a strong trigger for convection as a cold front moved through the state, and an outflow boundary once again was expected to allow low level winds to remain southeasterly and aid in low level shear. The disappointment would come with winds remaining southwesterly ahead of the cold front, and the lack of a capping inversion allowing the whole cold front to be socked in with showers/storms from Noon onward. At least there were thunderstorms, albeit outflow dominant, that would let you chase something! Wind reports were consistent with at least three separate thunderstorms today, with winds ranging from 60-85 mph across eastern Iowa. Still, a day that would have offered tornado potential for the state would be ruined by a cold front with little inhibition and the lack of cooperation of the surface winds.
If anything can be learned from the past two days, trust instincts that a 12-13C temperature at 700hPa and no strong convergence in the lower levels will lead to nothing but struggling cumulus or blue skies. And, when a cold front comes into the state then you need the 12C temperature at 700hPa along with some southeast if not at least south winds to provide low level shear.
Here's to the hope that the more summer-like thunderstorms can provide some punch for the state with at least some great lightning and supercellular structure!!
1 comments:
On the bright side, your roads will stay clear!! :)
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