Tuesday, May 21, 2013

Power of Moore Tornado Dwarfs Hiroshima Bomb

Power of Moore Tornado Dwarfs Hiroshima Bomb

ABC News - ‎21 minutes ago‎
Wind, humidity and rainfall combined precisely to create the massive killer tornado in Moore, Okla. And when they did, the awesome amount of energy released over that city dwarfed the power of the atomic bomb that leveled Hiroshima.
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Power of Moore Tornado Dwarfs Hiroshima Bomb


Wind, humidity and rainfall combined precisely to create the massive killer tornado in Moore, Okla. And when they did, the awesome amount of energy released over that city dwarfed the power of the atomic bomb that leveled Hiroshima.
On Tuesday afternoon, the National Weather Service gave it the top-of-the-scale rating of EF-5 for wind speed and breadth and severity of damage. Wind speeds were estimated at between 200 and 210 mph.
Several meteorologists contacted by The Associated Press used real time measurements to calculate the energy released during the storm's life span of almost an hour. Their estimates ranged from 8 times to more than 600 times the power of the Hiroshima bomb with more experts at the high end.
The tornado at some points was 1.3 miles wide, and its path went on for 17 miles and 40 minutes. That's long for a regular tornado but not too unusual for such a violent one, said research meteorologist Harold Brooks at the National Severe Storms Laboratory in Norman, Okla. Less than 1 percent of all U .S. tornadoes are this violent — only about 10 a year, he said.
With the third strong storm hitting Moore in 14 years, some people are wondering why Moore? It's a combination of geography, meteorology and lots of bad luck, experts said.
If you look at the climate history of tornadoes in May, you will see they cluster in a spot — maybe 100 miles wide — in central Oklahoma "and there's good reason for it," said Adam Houston, meteorology professor at the University of Nebraska, Lincoln. That's the spot where the weather conditions of warm, moist air and strong wind shear needed for tornadoes combine in just the right balance.
The hot spot is more than just the city of Moore. Several meteorologists offer the same explanation for why that suburb seemed to be hit repeatedly by violent tornadoes: "bad luck."
Scientists know the key ingredients that go into a devastating tornado. But they are struggling to figure out why they develop in some big storms and not others. They also are still trying to determine what effects, if any, global warming has on tornadoes.
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Online
The National Weather Center; http://www.nwc.ou.edu/
Seth Borenstein can be followed at http://twitter.com/borenbears
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Power of Moore Tornado Dwarfs Hiroshima Bomb

Unfortunately, since there have been 3 huge tornadoes there in Moore and Oklahoma City in the last 20 years it is likely (probability wise) that there will be more in the future. It looks like the laws of probability aren't in that areas favor in regard to large tornadoes.  As, the heat increases worldwide winds will increase in every form of weather over the years too(Because more heat causes updrafts to move more rapidly off the ground. I think universities should create models of where tornadoes have struck in the past and model how they have increased in the last 10 or 20 years. This would predict where large tornadoes likely would occur (in probability) in the next 20 to 50 years as well.

 

 If people in those high probability of large tornadoes areas were required to build a cement bunker with a metal door to escape them underground it might be a good idea in regard to saving lives in the future. However, saving houses unless they were built of metal and cement in a certain way might not be possible. Unless you design a home to survive a 200 mph wind it isn't going to. Even then you would have to shutter the home with metal locking shutters and even then the windows might blow out or be knocked out by flying debris or suction from the tornadoes. But there is always underground or burm homes that might still stand even if the windows had to be replaced. note(a Burm home is a cement home that you grow your grass on your roof sod). Though your lawn and sod might fly away  in a tornado your home would not.

 

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