Poster Session 4 Bow Echoes, MCSs, and Mesoscale Processes Posters

Tuesday, 28 October 2008: 3:00 PM-4:30 PM
Madison Ballroom (Hilton DeSoto)
Host: 24th Conference on Severe Local Storms

Papers:
P4.1
A case study of a long-lived warm-core circulation in the southern plains during the summer of 2007
Chad M. Shafer, University of Oklahoma, Norman, OK ; and K. H. Goebbert, A. D. Schenkman, and N. Snook

P4.2
Composite RUC analyses of weakly-forced mesoscale convective systems
Jason Hwang, NOAA/NSSL; and D. J. Stensrud and M. C. Coniglio

P4.3
P4.4
The presence of thermal wind balance in MCS environments
Benjamin C. Baranowski, North Carolina State University, Raleigh, NC; and M. D. Parker

P4.5
Processes That Influence The Damaging Potential of Bow Echo Mesovortices
Nolan T. Atkins, Lyndon State College, Lyndonville, VT ; and M. St. Laurent

P4.6
Documentation of the overland reintensification of Tropical Storm Erin over Oklahoma, August 18, 2007
John P. Monteverdi, San Francisco State Univ., San Francisco, CA; and R. Edwards

Handout (821.5 kB)

P4.7
An Observational Investigation of Mesoscale Convective Systems Crossing the Appalachian Mountains
Casey E. Letkewicz, North Carolina State University, Raleigh, NC; and M. D. Parker

Handout (1.7 MB)

P4.8
P4.9
P4.10
A detailed analysis of vortex characteristics within a tornadic quasi-linear convective system
Pamela M. Murray, Creighton University, Omaha, NE ; and J. Martinelli and J. B. Eylander

P4.12
Rapid-scan observations of a bow echo storm with a dual-polarization WSR-88D
Matthew R. Kumjian, CIMMS/Univ. of Oklahoma and NOAA/NSSL, Norman, OK ; and A. V. Ryzhkov

Handout (1.7 MB)

- Indicates paper has been withdrawn from meeting
- Indicates an Award Winner
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