ECSS2023-112
https://doi.org/10.5194/ecss2023-112
11th European Conference on Severe Storms
© Author(s) 2023. This work is distributed under
the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License.

Overview of the PERiLS (Propagation, Evolution and Rotation in Linear Storms) Project

Karen Kosiba1, Josh Wurman1, Jeff Trapp1, Steve Nesbitt1, and Matt Parker2
Karen Kosiba et al.
  • 1University of Illinois, Department of Atmospheric Sciences, Urbana, United States of America (kakosiba@illinois.edu)
  • 2North Carolina State University, Marine, Earth and Atmospheric Sciences, Raleigh, United States of America

The PERiLS (Propagation, Evolution and Rotation in Linear Storms) project is designed to study tornadoes produced by Quasi-Linear Convective Systems (QLCS) in the southeast United States.  QLCS-spawned tornadoes pose a significant threat to lives and property, but forecasting QLCS tornado events poses special challenges, more so than forecasting supercell tornadoes.  PERiLS is the largest and most ambitious field project focusing on QLCSs tornadoes, combining a dense, adaptable X- and C-band research radar array, including substantial instrumentation from the Flexible Array of Radars and Mesonets (FARM) including  the new quickly-assembled C-band On Wheels (COW), two Doppler On Wheels (DOW) a multitude of quickly-deployable surface instruments (PODNET), the UI deployable wind profiler, Mobile Mesonets, and several upper air sounding systems, to provide the sampling necessary to address environmental factors and storm processes that lead to QLCS tornadogenesis.  PERiLS is a multi-year field project; the first field phase occurred from 1 March to 1 May 2022; and the second field phase from 8 February to 8 May 2023.  

Preliminary data and analyses that address the science objectives of the National Science Foundation research teams, the pre-scouting and design of a radar network for each IOP, and other unique experimental field project design will be discussed.  During the 2022 field phase, PERiLS conducted four IOPs, during which tornado strength rotations were observed.  Preliminary analyses of IOPs 1 and 3 will be presented and an overview of the data collected during PERILS-2023 will be presented. 

 

How to cite: Kosiba, K., Wurman, J., Trapp, J., Nesbitt, S., and Parker, M.: Overview of the PERiLS (Propagation, Evolution and Rotation in Linear Storms) Project, 11th European Conference on Severe Storms, Bucharest, Romania, 8–12 May 2023, ECSS2023-112, https://doi.org/10.5194/ecss2023-112, 2023.