4.6 Article

Examining Conditions Supporting the Development of Anomalous Charge Structures in Supercell Thunderstorms in the Southeastern United States

Journal

JOURNAL OF GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH-ATMOSPHERES
Volume 126, Issue 16, Pages -

Publisher

AMER GEOPHYSICAL UNION
DOI: 10.1029/2021JD034582

Keywords

atmospheric electricity; anomalous charge structure; supercell thunderstorm; supercell kinematics; precipitation microphysics; lightning

Funding

  1. NASA Severe Storms Research under NASA Marshall Space Flight Center [NNH14ZDA001N, NNM11AA01A]

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Studying normal and anomalous supercell thunderstorms in the Southeast, it was found that anomalous supercells had greater quantities of precipitation ice at higher altitudes and colder temperatures, suggesting increased riming growth and vertical transport. The anomalous supercell environments were characterized by increased instability, shallower warm cloud depth, and lower relative humidity in the 700-500 mb layer, potentially impacting particle-scale charge transfer.
Hypotheses regarding favorable conditions for anomalous charging have primarily resulted from studies within the Great Plains region of the United States, where the efficiency of warm precipitation processes is thought to be fundamental. Rare observations of anomalous charge structures in the Southeastern region challenge existing conceptual models used to explain anomalous charging. As a rigorous evaluation of conditions that support anomalous charge structures, environmental characteristics and bulk kinematic and microphysical properties of two normal and two anomalous supercell thunderstorms observed in the Southeast were compared. Within the anomalous supercells, greater quantities of precipitation ice were identified at higher altitudes and colder temperatures, suggesting a greater depth of riming growth and increased vertical transport of rimed hydrometeors. Deeper anomalous supercell updrafts were larger and stronger in the upper mixed-phase and glaciated regions. However, normal supercells were characterized by more robust low-level updrafts, resulting in comparable warm cloud residence times that suggested warm precipitation processes were not necessarily less efficient in the anomalous supercells. Indications of enhanced mixed-phase liquid water content in favor of anomalous charging were observed in the anomalous supercells, though contrasts in related environmental parameters were not as large as observed in other comparative studies. Anomalous supercell environments were characterized by increased instability, shallower warm cloud depth, as well as lower relative humidity in the 700-500 mb layer. Evidence of impacts from dry air in anomalous storm structures suggested that water vapor content may have affected particle-scale charge transfer in support of anomalous charge structure development.

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