July 14, 2020
Journal Article

Multiple-platform and multiple-Doppler radar observations of a supercell thunderstorm in South America during RELAMPAGO

Abstract

On 10 November 2018, during the RELAMPAGO field campaign in Argentina, South America, a thunderstorm with supercell characteristics was observed by an array of mobile observing instruments, including three Doppler on Wheels (DOW) radars. This is believed to be the first such storm ever sampled by multiple Doppler radars in South America, and one of perhaps two such sets of observations in the Southern Hemisphere. The observational strategies employed within the Córdoba Province on 10 November are described, as also is the evolution of the initial deep convective clouds through their organization into a supercell. In contrast to the archetypal supercell, the updraft rotation in this storm was rather short lived (~20 min), as also was the occurrence of damaging hail, causing us to question whether this indeed was indeed a supercell. However, additional data collected within the Córdoba Province provide us with evidence of other storms with this behavior, which appears to be attributable in part to effects of the local terrain. Thus, the structure and evolution of this storm documented during RELAMPAGO may be typical in this region.

Revised: October 15, 2020 | Published: July 14, 2020

Citation

Trapp R., K.A. Kosiba, J.N. Marquis, M.R. Kumjian, S.W. Nesbitt, J. Wurman, and P. Salio, et al. 2020. Multiple-platform and multiple-Doppler radar observations of a supercell thunderstorm in South America during RELAMPAGO. Monthly Weather Review 148, no. 8:3225–3241. PNNL-SA-152475. doi:10.1175/MWR-D-20-0125.1