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VORTEX 2: Chasing Down the Storm

Article from May 29, 2009

A mobile mesonet vehicle, one of several used in the VORTEX 2 project, deploys to get data along a squall line during scientific field operations in May, 2009.
If you're like me, you remember going to see Twister in the theater. I had just started high school at the time, and there was a certain appeal to the idea of barreling down two-lane country highways in a pickup truck full of weather instruments in hot pursuit of a powerful tornado, all in the name of science. (Bonus trivia: I was not alone – many colleges saw a marked increase in enrollment in meteorology programs in the years following Twister!) Of course, today, as a Ph.D. student in meteorology, I realize that real meteorological field work isn't all about speeding and adventure.

Now, more than a decade after Twister, meteorologists and non-meteorologists alike have the chance to see a genuine meteorological field operation in action. The long-awaited VORTEX 2 project is in full swing, and via the wonders of the internet (and in particular through blogs and Facebook), anyone can follow along as dozens of scientists converge on the Great Plains to hunt down tornadoes in a veritable armada of radar trucks, mobile mesonets, and support vehicles. While some of the images, including the impressive shot on the right, may evoke scenes from Twister, the reality of meteorological field work is not quite what Hollywood imagined.


VORTEX 2 is a two-year scientific field project, scheduled to run through mid-June of this year, and again in May and June of 2010, building on the results from the original VORTEX project, which occurred during 1994 and 1995. During those months, meteorologists from around the world will prowl the Great Plains in a fleet of around 40 vehicles, collecting data on severe thunderstorms, and in particular, tornadoes. VORTEX is an acronym for “Verification of the Origins of Rotation in Thunderstorms Experiment” (technically, it's more of a “backronym”, where the name was engineered to produce a specific, catchy acronym—a practice common in naming scientific experiments, but I digress). The goals of VORTEX 2 are precisely what it says on the tin: gathering data on the formation and origins of tornadoes using mobile radar platforms, mesonet vehicles, UAV's, and deployable “Tornado PODs” to be dropped in the path of tornadoes (think Toto, not Dorothy. Better yet, think one of these).

Unlike the thrill-a-minute action envisioned in Twister, real meteorological field work is not nearly so glamorous and exciting. First of all, tornadoes have been rather scarce this May, meaning a lot of downtime for the VORTEX 2 scientists. Such fieldwork can also be at times difficult, tiring, and physically demanding. Many students and scientists in VORTEX 2 must essentially clear their schedules for a month and be prepared on any given day, at the whim of the atmosphere, to get up early and drive weather equipment hundreds of miles across the open plains to reach the next day's target location. Far from steak, potatoes, and gravy at Aunt Meg's house, the food in a real-life field experiment often consists of hotel continental breakfasts, fast-food hurriedly grabbed during downtime, and, for the particularly strong-of-constitution, the occasional gas station burrito.

Still, for the scientists of VORTEX 2, the challenges are well worth it—studies have shown that results from the first VORTEX project during the mid 1990's resulted in an improvement in tornado warnings in subsequent years. The participants of VORTEX 2 are hopeful that this latest continuation of that work will again lead to better tornado forecasts and tornado warnings, and lives saved.

For more information on VORTEX 2, check out their official site on the NSSL webpage. For more information on the severe weather, including the latest up-to-date weather information and severe weather alerts, tune in to your local NOAA weather radio station (see this NWS site for more information), or check the the NWS homepage. And of course, if it's weather data you're looking for, there's no better place than right here on HOOT to find it!



Story is © Nate Snook, 2009
Title Date Author
A Cool, Wet End to Summer 15 Sept. 2009 Nate Snook, 2009
Can't Beat the Heat 12 Jul. 2009 Nate Snook, 2009
VORTEX 2: Chasing Down the Storm May 29, 2009 Nate Snook, 2009
The Dryline that Set the State Ablaze 14 April 2009 Nate Snook, 2009
Fire Down Under 06 Mar 2009 Nate Snook, 2009
A Story Of Sleet and Drought 06 Feb 2009 Nate Snook, 2009
A Winter Travel Parable 06 Jan 2009 Nate Snook, 2009
Winter in Oklahoma 02 December 2008 Nate Snook, 2008
The Weather and the Election 01 Nov 2008 Nate Snook, 2008
Autumn Arrives 01 October 2008 Nate Snook, 2008
Active Atlantic 03 Sept 2008 Nate Snook, 2008
Clearing the Air for the Olympics 1 August 2008 Nate Snook, 2008
The Canals of… Cedar Rapids? 7 July 2008 Nate Snook, 2008
The Storms of May 2008 2 June 2008 Nate Snook, 2008
The First EF5 – Greensburg: One Year Later 05 May 2008 Nate Snook, 2008
Meltdown 02 April 2008 Nate Snook, 2008
Leap Year: Climate meets Astronomy meets Society 3 March 2008 Nate Snook, 2008
Indecision 2008: Southern Plains Edition February 2008 Nate Snook, 2008
Anatomy of an Ice Storm January 2008 Nate Snook, 2007
Winter starts when? December 2007 Nate Snook, 2007
The Perfect Firestorm November 2007 Nate Snook, 2007
Rainfall Record Ahead? October 2007 Nate Snook, 2007
Erin - An Unusual Tropical Storm September 2007 Nate Snook, 2007
A Slow Start to the NATL TC Season August 2007 Nate Snook, 2007
Tropical Depression Norman? July 2007 Nate Snook, 2007
Spring 2007 Among Wettest Ever in Central Oklahoma June 2007 Nate Snook, 2006
Wet Winter Ahead? Late 2006 Steve Irwin, 2006
Oklahoma: Can't Beat the Heat! August 2006 Kevin Goebbert, 2006
Oklahoma Gets Some Rain May 2006 Kevin Goebbert, 2006
© 2008 Oklahoma Weather Lab
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The University of Oklahoma, School of Meteorology