Abstract

Abstract Several previous studies have established statistical relationships between the severity of convection and environmental conditions determined from rawinsonde observations. Here, the authors seek 1) to determine whether similar relationships are observed when severe weather reports are associated with gridded short-term numerical forecasts, and 2) to develop and demonstrate a prototypal probabilistic model to forecast the likelihood a thunderstorm will be tornadic. Severe weather reports and lightning network data from 1 January 1999 through 30 June 1999 were used to classify the weather at a set of Rapid Update Cycle (RUC-2) grid points into four weather categories. These were no thunderstorms, nonsupercellular thunderstorms, supercellular thunderstorms without significant tornadoes, and thunderstorms with significant tornadoes (F2 or greater). RUC-2 forecast convective available potential energy (CAPE), helicity, and 0–4-km mean wind shear from the same period were associated with this gridded ...

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