ap

Skip to content
PUBLISHED:
Getting your player ready...

BOULDER, Colo.—Scientists have completed the first phase of a two-year, $12 million project to study tornadoes in the central United States, encountering only one twister as they stalked storms in a nine-state region with an army of 120 researchers and 50 vehicles.

Researchers hope to use the program to learn more about how tornadoes form and the damage that they can cause, while improving the lead times on tornado warnings to the public. On Wednesday, they discussed their storm-chasing efforts during the first phase of the project.

In a below-average tornado season, it was nearly a month before scientists finally got a first-hand look at a tornado. One touched down in Wyoming two weeks ago.

The June 5 twister in southeastern Wyoming had nearly ideal conditions for study, said Josh Wurman of the Vortex2 project. The tornado was isolated and moved in a relatively straight line.

“Nature threw us a very slow pitch that day,” Wurman said.

Because the researchers had detected tornado conditions, they arrived at the scene 20 minutes before the twister formed, giving them time to gather key information that will help them understand what causes such storms.

“That’s the prize that we’re after,” said David Dowell, a scientist with the National Center for Atmospheric Research in Boulder.

One group of researchers got within about a mile of the tornado, and some unmanned instrument clusters were closer, although Wurman said the tornado may not have passed directly over them as they hoped.

The project name, Vortex2, stands for Verification of the Origins of Rotation in Tornadoes Experiment-2 The two-year, $12 million project is funded primarily by the National Science Foundation and the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration.

Vortex2 also focused on Minnesota, South Dakota, Iowa, Nebraska, Colorado, Kansas, Texas and Oklahoma.

Weather equipment used during the study included multiple types of radar, mobile mesonets, mobile ballooning systems, unmanned aircraft, tornado pods and particle probes.

The instruments measure wind, temperature, humidity and pressure, and two cameras record video. They’re designed to survive a direct hit, but even if they’re destroyed, the data would likely survive because it’s stored in a heavy waterproof case, said Wurman, president of the Center for Severe Weather Research.

Although they only saw one tornado first-hand, Wurman and other researchers insist the first phase of the project was a success.

They tracked and studied numerous thunderstorms that didn’t spawn tornadoes, which they said will help them figure out why some weather systems produce twisters and others don’t.

They also learned how to quickly deploy their army of 120 researchers and 50 vehicles, some equipped with mobile radar.

“I’m pretty confident now that we’ve debugged the system,” said Roger Wakimoto, senior scientist with the National Center for Atmospheric Research. “It was almost like a military operation.”

The field study resumes in May.

———

On the Net:

Vortex2:

RevContent Feed

More in News