How Tornado Forecasting Changed Since 'Twister' | Weather.com (2024)

How Tornado Forecasting Changed Since 'Twister' | Weather.com (1)

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This summer's release of the movie "Twisters" may bring to mind how much has changed in the meteorology and technology of tornado forecasting and warnings since the original "Twister" came out 28 years ago.

D​irected by Lee Isaac Chung, this latest action thriller will arrive in theaters in the U.S. July 17, and stars Daisy Edgar-Jones and Glen Powell.

"​This is just a modern telling of that same community that audiences responded to in '96," Powell told Reuters, referring to the movie "Twister" released in 1996, as the new film was premiering in London.

L​et's take a trip down memory lane and revisit 1996.

T​echnology

An estimated 36 million were using the "world wide web" in 1996, the year after weather.com launched. In April 2024, almost 5.5 billion were online, or roughly two out of every three people on Earth.

I​t would also be another 11 years until Apple first unveiled the iPhone. So, no apps with radar, alerts or live streaming severe weather. Instead, the PalmPilot 100, a "personal digital assistant" was released, planting an early seed for what would eventually become the smartphone.

S​ocial media was also in its infancy. Instead of TikTok, Instagram, Snapchat, Facebook and X (formerly Twitter) serving up video and photos of tornadoes as they're happening, the world's first social networking site, "Six Degrees" was founded in 1996. It would be seven years before the first widely-used social network, MySpace, was launched.

(Further beef up your forecast with our detailed, hour-by-hour breakdown for the next 8 days – only available on our Premium Pro experience.)

How Tornado Forecasting Changed Since 'Twister' | Weather.com (2)

F​orecasting

N​OAA's Storm Prediction Center (SPC) issues daily national forecasts of severe thunderstorms and coordinates with local National Weather Service offices to issue tornado and severe thunderstorm watches.

I​n 1996, they hadn't yet completed their move from Kansas City to Norman, Oklahoma, a move to increase collaboration with severe storm researchers in central Oklahoma.

At that time, SPC's outlooks were only issued for the current day (Day 1) and the next day (Day 2). In 2024, they're issued in detail for today, tomorrow and the next day (Day 3), and broad outlooks for the following five days are also issued to give an early heads up on potential outbreaks up to a week in advance.

Now heavily used today, ensemble forecasting - running the same computer model multiple times with slightly tweaked initial conditions - was just in its initial stages in the mid-1990s. And today's computer models specially tuned to thunderstorms - known as convection-allowing models or CAMs - weren't in a forecaster's toolbox in 1996.

(For even more granular weather data tracking in your area, view your 15-minute details forecast in our Premium Pro experience.)

How Tornado Forecasting Changed Since 'Twister' | Weather.com (3)

R​adar

T​he nationwide rollout of National Weather Service Doppler radars wasn't completed until 1997, the year after "Twister" debuted.

T​oday, not only do we have this national network that can detect rotation in severe thunderstorms, but we can also detect debris lofted by tornadoes, confirming their presence, even at night without spotters.

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T​his so-called tornadic debris signature was made possible by a retrofitting all NWS radars from 2010 through 2013 with dual-polarization technology designed to pick up the shape of particles, not simply their size or wind motion.

N​WS Doppler radars are now also able to scan the lower levels of severe thunderstorms more frequently through a scanning strategy known as "SAILS". This allows forecasters to monitor for critical changes in severe thunderstorms, including identifying tornadoes faster.

How Tornado Forecasting Changed Since 'Twister' | Weather.com (4)

W​arnings

I​n 1996, tornado and severe thunderstorm warnings were largely issued by county. That often warned too many people for severe weather that may only have affected part of a county.

S​o, in 2007, the NWS rolled out "storm-based warnings": smaller, more focused warnings based on the storm, not the county it impacted. Researchers are working on a new paradigm for warnings, known as FACETs, that could continuously change with the storm.

Unlike in 1996, we also have different types of tornado warnings today. These range from warnings due to rotation seen above the ground that could produce a tornado, to the tornado emergency, when a life-threatening, potentially catastrophic tornado is ongoing, usually headed toward a town or city.

T​hat first "tornado emergency" was issued by the NWS-Norman, Oklahoma, office during the May 3, 1999 outbreak.

T​here are also higher-end warnings for severe thunderstorms - with at least baseball size hail or more destructive winds - and flash flood emergencies.​

How Tornado Forecasting Changed Since 'Twister' | Weather.com (5)

Damage Surveys

We have also seen a change in the tornado damage scale since "Twister".

T​he original Fujita Scale, developed in 1971, rated tornadoes from F0 to F5. But as weather.com meteorologist Jonathan Belles explained in a previous article, there were shortcomings with that scale, including estimated wind speeds that were too high.

In 2007, after extensive study by a panel of meteorologists and engineers, the current Enhanced-Fujita (EF) scale was implemented, incorporating not simply damage from homes, but also barns, retail buildings, factories, high-rises, even transmission towers and trees among its 28 damage indicators.

A​s opposed to 1996, today's damage surveys can be done using drones to access hard-to-reach areas. Post-storm satellite imagery is also used today to either help confirm weaker, short-lived tornadoes or define their paths.

How Tornado Forecasting Changed Since 'Twister' | Weather.com (6)

W​hat Else Happened In Summer 1996

  • O​n July 18, 1996, the year's only F5 tornado tore like a drill bit through Oakfield, Wisconsin. Miraculously, nobody was killed.
  • America's only two landfalling hurricanes of the 1996 season each did so over North Carolina's Bald Head Island. Bertha did so as a Cat. 2 in mid-July, followed by Cat. 3 Fran on Sept. 5.
  • D​olly The Sheep, the first mammal to be successfully cloned from an adult cell, was born on July 5.
  • T​he Summer Olympics were held in Atlanta from mid-July through early August.

M​ORE ON WEATHER.COM

-​ How To Prepare For Severe Weather Like A Meteorologist

-​ 10 Tornado Myths Busted

-​ 15 Severe Weather Tips That Could Save Your Life

Jonathan Erdman is a senior meteorologist at weather.com and has been covering national and international weather since 1996. His lifelong love of meteorology began with a close encounter with a tornado as a child in Wisconsin. He completed a Bachelor's degree in physics at the University of Wisconsin-Madison, then a Master's degree working with dual-polarization radar and lightning data at Colorado State University. Extreme and bizarre weather are his favorite topics. Reach out to him on X (formerly Twitter), Threads, Facebook and Bluesky.

How Tornado Forecasting Changed Since 'Twister' | Weather.com (2024)

FAQs

How good are we at predicting tornadoes? ›

Forecasters now are really good at identifying the days when the ingredients are in place, when the potential is there for a lot of tornadoes to happen,” Schumacher said. “But it's still really difficult to identify which of those storms is going to make a tornado.”

How to forecast for tornadoes? ›

Forecasters and storm spotters have learned to recognize certain thunderstorm features and structure that make tornado formation more likely. Some of these are visual cues, like the rear-flank downdraft, and others are particular patterns in radar images, like the tornadic vortex signature (TVS).

How did two men make the first successful tornado prediction? ›

On the morning weather charts of March 25, 1948, Miller and Fawbush noted a great similarity between the charts of March 20 and March 25, 1948. After analyzing the surface and upper-air data, a prognostic chart was prepared for 6 p.m. local time showing the expected position of the various critical parameters.

What data is necessary to predict or forecast a tornado? ›

Real-time weather observations--from satellites, weather stations, balloon packages, airplanes, wind profilers and radar-derived winds--become more and more critical the sooner the thunderstorms are expected; and the models become less important.

Why are tornadoes still hard to forecast even though storm predictions are improving? ›

Yet tornadoes are notoriously difficult to forecast because scientists don't have a clear picture of why they form. "We can see two storms that look identical, and one will produce a tornado and one won't. We don't fully understand it," Kurdzo says.

What are the challenges and shortcomings of tornado prediction? ›

Predicting which supercells will produce tornadoes more than about 10 minutes in advance can be challenging because of small-scale processes that occur within storms that are often unobservable by our current observing networks of radar and surface observations.

What are 2 signs that a tornado is coming? ›

Tornado Warning Signs List
  • The color of the sky may change to a dark greenish color.
  • A strange quiet occurring within or shortly after a thunderstorm.
  • A loud roar that sounds similar to a freight train.
  • An approaching cloud of debris, especially at ground level.
  • Debris falling from the sky.

What was the worst tornado in history? ›

Deadliest single tornado in US history

The Tri-State tornado of March 18, 1925, killed 695 people in Missouri (11), Illinois (613), and Indiana (71). The outbreak it occurred with was also the deadliest known tornado outbreak, with a combined death toll of 747 across the Mississippi River Valley.

Are twisters tornadoes? ›

Also known as twisters, tornadoes are violently spinning, funnel-shaped columns of air that stretch from the dark thunderclouds they form in all the way to the ground.

What will happen if 2 tornadoes collide? ›

When two tornadoes come into contact in this way, the results can vary dramatically, depending on the strength and proximity of the two storms. Sometimes the storms will merge, resulting in a larger and more powerful storm. In other cases, they will repel each other, causing them to move apart and potentially weaken.

For which 2 reasons are tornadoes so hard to predict? ›

Even changes in the land surface conditions – fields, forested regions or urban environments – could affect whether a tornado forms. These small changes in the storm environment can have large impacts on the processes within storms that can make or break a tornado.

What's worse, tornado watch or warning? ›

A Tornado Watch is issued by the NWS when weather conditions in an area suggest an increased risk of severe weather capable of producing a tornado. The NWS releases a Tornado Warning when a tornado has been observed or detected by weather radar. A warning means you should seek shelter without delay.

Can tornadoes be stopped? ›

We can't stop tornadoes, but by being prepared and following tornado safety rules, lives can be saved and injuries prevented.

What are the 5 tools used to forecast tornadoes? ›

The tools and methods that are used to predict tornadoes include a barometer, a thermometer, an anemometer, weather radar, Doppler radar, turtles, and the EF scale. A the wind is measured using an anemometer.

Who decides if there was a tornado? ›

A Tornado WARNING is issued by your local NOAA National Weather Service Forecast Office meteorologists who watch the weather 24/7 over a designated area. This means a tornado has been reported by spotters or indicated by radar and there is a serious threat to life and property to those in the path of the tornado.

How far in advance can they predict tornadoes? ›

With the aid of modern observing systems, such as vertically pointing radars (called wind profilers) and imaging systems on satellites that can measure the flow of water vapour through the Earth's atmosphere, forecasters can usually identify where conditions will be favourable for tornado formation one to seven hours ...

What is the tornado prediction for 2024? ›

2024 has been a very active year for tornadoes here in the US. Preliminary data suggests up to 1,250 confirmed tornadoes touched down over the US between January and June.

Which is easier to predict hurricanes or tornadoes? ›

Scientists can usually predict a hurricane's path three to five days in advance. Tornadoes usually form in a span of a few minutes, are normally a few hundred feet wide, and last for a few minutes.

How to tell if a tornado is coming? ›

An approaching cloud of debris especially at ground level, even if a funnel is not visible; A loud roar - similar to a freight train - or a strange quiet occurring within or shortly after a thunderstorm. A change in the color of the sky. Debris dropping from the sky.

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