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Locating Tornadoes
hook echoes and velocity couplets

Tornadoes are often located at the center of a hook-shaped echo on the southwest side of thunderstorms. The hook is best observed in the reflectivity field. This image shows a reflectivity field containing several hook echoes associated with thunderstorms that occurred in Tennessee and Kentucky on May 18, 1995.


Another way to determine if a storm is tornadic is to examine the radial velocity field. A mesocyclone, the small rotating circulation with its center beneath the updraft of a supercell thunderstorm, is detectable as a velocity couplet.


The couplet is oriented so that a concentrated area of radial winds moving away from the radar appears on one side of the beam axis, while a concentrated area of radial winds moving toward the radar appears on the opposite side of the beam axis. When the central pixels near the beam axis show exceptionally strong winds, this signature is called a tornado vortex signature (TVS). This image shows the TVS in the velocity field from the same Tennessee and Kentucky storms. Negative values (blue-green) denote movement toward the radar and positive values (yellow-red) represent movement away from the radar.


Image provided by: NSSL

Here is the reflectivity field from a storm which produced a tornado in Texas on May 29, 1995. The hook echo in the reflectivity field is located near Newcastle.


Image provided by: NSSL

Here is the velocity couplet associated with the Newcastle hook echo (red and green pixels adjacent to each other).



Velocity Patterns
Terms for using data resources. CD-ROM available.
Credits and Acknowledgments for WW2010.
Department of Atmospheric Sciences (DAS) at
the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign.

hurricanes