© Miroslav Vajdić |
The
authors are John A. Knox, Jared A. Rackley, Alan W. Black, Michael Butler, Corey Dunn, Taylor Gallo, Melyssa R. Hunter, Lauren Lindsey, Minh Phan and Robert Scroggs of the University of Georgia USA; Vittorio A. Gensini of the College of DuPage, Glen Ellyn, Illinois - USA; Synne Brustad of the University of Oslo - Norway
Using publicly available information gleaned from over 1700
found-and-returned objects on the “Pictures and Documents found after
the 27 April 2011 Tornadoes” Facebook page, the authors have created a
database of 934 objects lofted by at least 15 different tornadoes during
the 27 April 2011 Super Outbreak in the southeast United States.
Analysis of the takeoff and landing points of these objects using GIS
and high-resolution numerical trajectory modeling techniques extends
previous work on this subject that used less specific information for
much smaller sets of tracked tornado debris. It was found that objects
traveled as far as 353 km, exceeding the previous record for the longest
documented tornado debris trajectory. While the majority of debris
trajectories were 10° to the left of the average tornado track vector,
the longest trajectories exhibited a previously undocumented tendency
toward the right of the average tornado track vector. Based on results
from a high-resolution trajectory model, a relationship between this
tendency and the altitude of lofting of debris is hypothesized, with the
debris reaching the highest altitudes taking the rightmost
trajectories. The paper concludes with a discussion of the pros and cons
of using social media information for meteorological research.
Department of Geography, University of Georgia, Athens, Georgia
John A. Knox , Jared A. Rackley , and Alan W. Black
Meteorology Program, College of DuPage, Glen Ellyn, Illinois
Vittorio A. Gensini
Department of Geography, University of Georgia, Athens, Georgia
Michael Butler , Corey Dunn , Taylor Gallo , Melyssa R. Hunter , Lauren Lindsey , Minh Phan , and Robert Scroggs
Department of Geosciences, University of Oslo, Oslo, Norway
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