Tuesday, 12 September 2000: 1:30 PM
At approximately 04:00 UTC on 4 May (23:00 CDT on 3 May) 1999 the NASA
Tropical Rainfall Measuring Mission (TRMM) Observatory made an overpass
during the Central Oklahoma tornado outbreak. Supercells D4 and G5 were
observed by a unique suite of scientific instruments aboard TRMM. The TRMM
observatory was launched in November 1997 into a low earth orbit providing
global coverage of storms from 35 degrees N latitude to 35 degrees S
latitude from an altitude of 350 km. The instruments include the Lightning
Imaging Sensor (LIS) which measures total lighting activity (in-cloud as
well as cloud-to-ground), the TRMM Microwave Imager (TMI) which measures
precipitation and cloud microphysical characteristics, the Precipitation
Radar (PR) which is the first meteorological radar flown in low earth orbit,
and the Visible/InfraRed Sensor (VIRS) which measures cloud top
characteristics such as cloud top temperature in the visible and infrared
with high (2 km) spatial resolution. Supercell D4 at Stroud, Oklahoma
produced the greatest lightning rates (exceeding 225 flashes per minute)
observed worldwide to date by the LIS. The presentation will present
detailed satellite and ground based observations of the supercells observed during the TRMM
overpass.
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