On the evening of Sunday, April 12 and into the early morning
hours of the 13th, strong winds developed behind a large area
of stratiform rain as it moved eastward across the central
Tennessee Valley. These strong winds were induced by the development
of a phenomenon known as a wake low. A wake low will often
form along the backside of large areas of rain or large complexes
of showers and thunderstorms, sometimes known as mesoscale
convective complexes (MCS). If conditions aloft are just right,
downward motion following the area of precipitation will result
in strong warming at the surface, which will further strengthen
the development of the wake low. The strong winds develop
as the pressure difference grows between this small, but relatively
strong area of low pressure and an adjacent area of high pressure.
Such was the case late on that Sunday eveninig, as the low
developed in northern Alabama, and an area of high pressure
was present in Georgia. During this particular wake low event,
high winds lasted for several hours, which resulted in a considerable
amount of damage, even though peak winds at the surface generally
did not exceed 60 miles per hour. The most concentrated area
of damage in the National Weather Service Huntsville County
Warning Area was along a swath from southern Franklin County
(Alabama), through Lawrence, Cullman, Morgan, Madison, Marshall,
Jackson, and DeKalb counties. Numerous trees and power lines
were downed in these areas, with many trees and power poles
falling on houses and blocking roadways. In Guntersville,
several boats were blown ashore and damaged. Some areas in
Jackson County remained without electricity as late as Thursday,
April 16th.
Note: Previously this was summarized as a gravity wave event.
However, some further investigation has revealed that the
strong winds across the area were likely the result of the
wake low alone. An analysis of the surface pressure and wind
speed trends at some observation sites reveals that the highest
wind speeds occurred before the lowest pressure readings.
This would indicate that the winds were primarily the result
of the pressure gradient alone, and not necessarily due to
the additional effects of a potential gravity wave. The graphs
below, taken from the Mobile Integrated Profiling System (MIPS)
located on the campus of the Univeristy of Alabama at Huntsville,
show that indeed the strongest winds occurred mainly before
the pressure bottomed out around 0700 UTC (2:00 AM CDT).


Notice that the wind speeds in the graph above are five-minute
averages, and that values around 30 mph were common for a
three-hour period beginning at 0400 UTC (11:00 PM CDT) and
lasting through 0700 UTC. To see a more in-depth discussion
regarding the subject of gravity waves and wake lows, click
here.
Preliminary
Storm Reports
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