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The Observation, Modeling, Theory, and Prediction of Severe Convective Storms and Their Attendant Hazards

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Wednesday, 1 February 2006: 2:30 PM-4:00 PM
Exhibit Hall A2 (Georgia World Congress Center)
Host: Symposium on the Challenges of Severe Convective Storms
Papers:
 
P1.1
Verification of multi-sensor, multi-radar hail diagnosis techniques
Kiel L. Ortega, University of Oklahoma/CIMMS and NOAA/NSSL, Norman, OK; and T. M. Smith and G. J. Stumpf

Poster PDF (191.0 kB)

 
P1.2
Storm Scale Forecasts and Observations of a North Alabama Hailstorm on December 10, 2004
Steven J. Goodman, NASA/MSFC, Huntsville, AL; and W. Lapenta, K. La Casse, E. W. McCaul Jr., and W. A. Petersen

 
P1.3
Optimal sampling strategies for hazardous weather detection using networks of dynamically adaptive Doppler radars
Jessica L. Proud, Center for Analysis and Prediction of Storms and Univ. of Oklahoma, Norman, OK; and K. K. Droegemeier, V. T. Wood, R. A. Brown, and L. White

Poster PDF (234.3 kB)

 
P1.4
A quantitative analysis of the enhanced-V signature in relation to severe weather
Jason C. Brunner, CIMSS/Univ. of Wisconsin, Madison, WI; and S. A. Ackerman, A. S. Bachmeier, and R. M. Rabin

Poster PDF (557.6 kB)

 
P1.6
Utilizing Experimental Graphical Severe Weather Warning Probabilities to Supplement the Hazardous Weather Outlook
J. Brad McGavock, NOAA/NWSFO, Tulsa, OK; and G. N. Mathews and J. M. Frederick

Poster PDF (360.2 kB)

 
P1.7
Tornado Warnings, Lead Times and Tornado Casualties: An Empirical Investigation
Daniel Sutter, CIMMS/Univ. of Oklahoma, Norman, OK; and K. M. Simmons

 
P1.8
The first workshop on severe weather technology for NWS warning decision making
M.A. Magsig, CIMMS/Univ. of Oklahoma/NWS/WDTB, Norman, OK; and G. J. Stumpf

Poster PDF (46.4 kB)

 
P1.9
 
P1.10
A case study of convective initiation along a retrograding dryline
Robert E. Barbre Jr., University of Alabama, Huntsville, AL; and J. R. Mecikalski and K. R. Knupp

 
P1.11
Ridge rollers: mesoscale disturbances on the periphery of cutoff anticyclones
Thomas J. Galarneau Jr., NCAR, Boulder, CO; and L. Bosart

Poster PDF (920.6 kB)

 
P1.12
Meteorological aspects of high-impact tornado outbreaks
Gregory S. Forbes, The Weather Channel, Atlanta, GA

Poster PDF (1.7 MB)

 
P1.13
Ground-based remotely sensed high temporal-resolution stability indices associated with southern Great Plains tornado outbreaks
Timothy J. Wagner, CIMSS/Univ. of Wisconsin, Madison, WI; and W. F. Feltz, R. A. Petersen, and S. A. Ackerman

Poster PDF (1.2 MB)

 
P1.14
Elevated convection and tropospheric inertial instability: A connection?
John A. Knox, University of Georgia, Athens, GA; and D. M. Schultz

 
P1.15
Discriminating Among Non Severe, Severe, and Derecho-Producing Mesoscale Convective System Environments
Ariel E. Cohen, Ohio State Univ., Columbus, OH; and M. C. Coniglio, S. F. Corfidi, and S. J. Corfidi

Poster PDF (227.9 kB)

 
P1.16
Adiabatic lapse rates in tornadic environments
Matthew D. Parker, North Carolina State Univ., Raleigh, NC

Poster PDF (320.8 kB)

 
P1.17
A numerical investigation of the synoptic environment associated with tornadic and nontornadic severe weather outbreaks
Hamish A. Ramsay, University of Oklahoma, Norman, OK; and C. A. Doswell III and L. M. Leslie

 
P1.18
The need for an improved documentation of severe thunderstorms and tornadoes in South America
Ernani L. Nascimento, Instituto Tecnológico SIMEPAR, Curitiba, PR, Brazil; and C. A. Doswell III

Poster PDF (1.4 MB)

 
P1.19
Reconstructing the frequency of tornado occurrence in the central United States
Matthew J. Menne, NOAA/NESDIS/NCDC, Asheville, NC

Poster PDF (298.9 kB)

 
P1.20
Simulations of exteme convective storms in future climates: proof-of-concept tests with a retrospective event
Brooke A. Halvorson, Purdue University, West Lafayette, IN; and R. J. Trapp and N. S. Diffenbaugh

Poster PDF (541.9 kB)

 
P1.21
A Twelve Year Climatological Analysis of Severe Local Storms Observed by the Oklahoma Mesonet
James E. Hocker, Oklahoma Climatological Survey, University of Oklahoma, Norman, OK; and J. B. Basara

Poster PDF (379.8 kB)

 
P1.22
A five-year climatology of elevated severe convective storms in the United States east of the Rocky Mountains
Katherine L. Horgan, North Carolina State University, Raleigh, NC, Raleigh, NC; and D. M. Schultz, R. H. Johns, S. F. Corfidi, and J. E. Hales

Poster PDF (919.2 kB)

 
P1.23
Why the swirl ratio is a useless parameter
David S. Nolan, Univ. of Miami/RSMAS, Miami, FL

 
P1.24
Tornado strength and the influence of dissipative heating
Jerry M. Straka, Univ. of Oklahoma, Norman, OK; and P. Markowski

 
P1.25
Comparison of numerical model and laboratory simulator tornado wind fields with radar observations of the Spencer, South Dakota tornado
William A. Gallus Jr., Iowa State University, Ames, IA; and F. L. Haan, P. Sarkar, K. Le, and J. Wurman

Poster PDF (374.5 kB)

 
P1.26
Analysis of a hook echo and rear flank downdraft from a simulated supercell on 8 May 2003
Lewis Grasso, Cooperative Institute for Research in the Atmosphere, Fort Collins, CO; and D. T. Lindsey

Poster PDF (1.8 MB)

 
P1.28
Challenges in comparing realistic, high-resolution spatial fields from convective-scale grids
Michael E. Baldwin, CIMMS/Univ. of Oklahoma and NOAA/NSSL, Norman, OK; and K. L. Elmore, D. C. Dowell, T. Fujita, L. J. Wicker, and D. J. Stensrud

Poster PDF (136.1 kB)

 
P1.29
What is a bow echo?
George H. Bryan, NCAR, Boulder, CO; and J. C. Knievel

 
P1.30
Forecasting the speed and longevity of severe mesoscale convective systems
Michael C. Coniglio, NOAA/NSSL, Norman, OK; and S. F. Corfidi

Poster PDF (826.2 kB)

 
P1.31
An examination of three Derecho events during the first week of July 2003 concurrent with BAMEX
Nicholas D. Metz, Hobart and William Smith Colleges, Geneva, NY; and L. Bosart

Poster PDF (1.8 MB)

 
P1.32
An examination of the long-lived MCV of 10-13 June 2003
Thomas J. Galarneau Jr., NCAR, Boulder, CO; and L. Bosart

Poster PDF (1.2 MB)

 
P1.33
An examination of flash flooding in the Binghamton, NY county warning area
Stephen M. Jessup, Cornell University, Ithaca, NY

 
P1.34
An analysis of severe hail swaths in the Southern Plains of the United States
Daniel R. Cheresnick, Self Employed, Longmont, CO; and J. Basara and E. D. Mitchell

Poster PDF (2.8 MB)

 
P1.35
Meso-scale pressure dips accompanied by a severe convective storm of tropical cyclones
Hironori Fudeyasu, National Research Institute for Earth Science and Disaster Prevention, Tsukuba, Japan; and S. IIzuka and T. Matsuura

Poster PDF (1.8 MB)

 
P1.36
The Connection Between a Cold Front Aloft and the Extensive Squall Line of 29–30 October 2004
Mark Stoelinga, Univ. of Washington, Seattle, WA; and J. D. Locatelli

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