Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
5753705 | Atmospheric Research | 2017 | 42 Pages |
Abstract
On 7 December 2010 a long lived convective storm formed southwest of Lisbon in an instability line that developed in a very moist and unstable airmass, in the circulation of an extra-tropical cyclone propagating north-eastwards. This storm crossed the Lisbon district and spawned an F3 tornado a few dozens of kilometers to the northeast. Several parameters evaluating buoyancy, available moisture and vertical wind shear, were derived from Lisbon rawinsonde and ECMWF analyses, highlighting an environment that is favourable for tornadic development. The tornado touchdown occurred by 14:15 UTC, lasting for about 45Â min and producing an exceptionally long damage path of around 54Â km, according to the damage survey. It caused about 18 million Euros damage, >Â 40 injured people, but no fatalities. This storm had a very long lifetime of at least 5Â h, intensified inland, sustained strong updrafts during, at least, 1Â h and hold large hail cores as observed on radar. Exhibiting several supercell like features, it also produced intense lightning, with a predominance of cloud-to-ground flashes before the tornado touchdown and intra-cloud flashes during the tornado lifetime. Furthermore, in high resolution visible satellite imagery, a pattern of feeder clouds was identified one hour before tornadogenesis. This pattern has been associated to storm intensification and the onset of severe weather.
Keywords
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering
Earth and Planetary Sciences
Atmospheric Science
Authors
Margarida Belo-Pereira, Cristina Andrade, Paulo Pinto,