By the numbers:
During an
average year the United States averages 1,224 tornadoes. The number of reported
U.S. tornadoes so far in 2018 is well below average. Looking at the trend and percentile
chart shows we're far below the 25th percentile; we're also virtually tied with
2005. 2005 holds the modern record for having the least number of tornadoes.
While most of
the Contiguous United States is well below average, the Northeast is not. Why
is that?
The same
pattern that is responsible for all the rain this Summer, is to blame for the
increased tornado activity. We've had a persistent
Upper Level Low (ULL) and a strong Bermuda
High in the Atlantic . The Anticlockwise
flow around the ULL and the clockwise flow around the Atlantic high has streamed
a lot of heat and humidity northward into the Northeast. This has resulted in a
lot of severe weather and flooding caused by torrential rainfall.
New England
has seen more than a dozen tornadoes this year. And while New York State and
Pennsylvania are average to slightly below average, the trend has been above
average by this time of year. New
Jersey, Maryland and Delaware haven't seen any so far. Here are a couple of charts I made. One shows the
number of tornadoes in the Northeast to date (these are the ones that I know of
and can verify). The other shows the annual number of tornadoes per state based
on an average from 1950-2010. It's easy to see New England is well above that
average.
Thunderstorms:
Thunderstorms
need 3 basic things to form. The first is moisture in the lower and middle
atmosphere. The second is instability, Warm
air at the surface with cooler drier air aloft is the key for instability to
develop. The warmer the surface air the greater the instability. The third thing is lift. Lift is something
that causes the warm moist air to rise in the form of an updraft. Differential
heating (The Sun heating the ground and air close to the surface) is the most
common way for lift to develop; but it can be caused by fronts, sea/lake
breezes, outflow boundaries from earlier storms, a dryline can also be a source
of lifting air aloft. The hot moist
southern air and the constant influx of frontal systems moving through has
produced the perfect conditions for thunderstorms and severe weather.
Severe
thunderstorms generally need a 4th ingredient. Winds moving indifferent
directions and speeds with height. This
is called wind shear. Storms can create vertical
and horizontal shear, as can other things. There are many forms of severe weather; but
the kind that gets the most attention is tornadoes. The wind shear that causes
supercells and tornadoes normally comes from the jet stream.
The Jet Stream:
The jet
stream is a ribbon of high-speed wind (located at nearly 6 miles above the
surface) that is related to the location, of the pole-to-equator temperature
contrast. The greater the temperature difference between the air masses the
faster the jet stream.
Most of the
tornadoes in the CONUS form in the Plains (Tornado Alley) or in the deep south
(Dixie Alley). Normally the position of
the Jet Stream is the reason for this. But this year we've see the Jet Stream
much farther north. This has made it difficult for storm systems to tap into
that moist warm air from the Gulf of Mexico (GOM). This year we've seen the jet primarily over
the Mid west or near the Canadian border; this has allowed the southern heat
and moisture to move into the Northeast.
The overlap of the warm moist air and the Jet Stream nearby has provided
the most favorable conditions for tornadoes to develop in the Northeast this
year.
While
increased awareness and platforms like social media can be attributed to some
of this increase in reported tornadoes; the vast majority of the increased number of Northeast
tornadoes can be blamed on the position of the Jet Stream.
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