A little more than a week after an EF3 tornado, packing winds of 136-165 mph, struck in the early morning hours of April 25, Ruston remains a city torn asunder by the force of nature.
The National Weather Service credits the University of Louisiana Monroe’s Doppler radar system as vitalinhelping save untold lives. The data from ’s Doppler radar was crucial to the alerts, alarms and sirens informing residents that a tornado was on the ground.
Prior toFebruary 2017, the NWSmay not have been able to provide adequate warningbecause there was a large gap in radar coverage.
installed its Doppler radar system in October 2016.“We have been providing the National Weather Service offices in Shreveport and Jackson with a direct feed of our data since February 2017,” saidTodd Murphy,anAssistantProfessor ofAtmosphericScience at .
Through a dedicated server, the system delivers NWS-Shreveport meteorologistsup-to-the-minute information that they use as a major tool in tracking dangerous weather.
“Before our Doppler radar, we relied on theweatherservice’s radar in Shreveport and Jackson. But because of the curvature of the Earth, those radar systems were overshooting Northeast Louisiana,” Murphy said.
On the night of April 24, the NWS-Shreveportwas tracking a storm system that included several reports of tornado damage along a 150-mile stretch beginning in St. Augustine County,Texas.
The storm moved northeast, taking aim at Ruston.
Monroe is closer to RustonthanShreveport is, “sowe were able to provide a lower radar beam” given the Earth’s curvature and the storm’s close proximity to the ground, Murphy said. That beam told quite a story.
The radar captured a debris signature with the storm that the Shreveport radar failed to detect.
“Shreveport saw circulation and a tornado debris signature” in the data transmitted from the system, Murphy said, explaining that a debris signature, when picked up by radar, is an indication that material is flying in the air and a tornado is on the ground. “It gave Shreveport more confidence in what they were seeing.”
The NWS-Shreveport meteorologists, using the data, then checked with their other resources.
“Usually, the weather service uses an array of reports--police, spotters and radar,” Murphy said
Jason Hansford, the meteorologist on dutyin Shreveport in theearly morningofApril 25, in correspondence with Murphy, explained how ’s radar “depicted a tightening circulation just southwest of Ruston along U.S. 80 around 1:45 a.m., with what appeared to be a debris signature which was confirmed by our damage survey team as the preliminary start point of the tornado.
“The debris signature was quite apparent around 1:52 a.m. near the intersection of U.S. 167 and I-20, which I noticed and immediately told the warning meteorologist on the Ruston storm to issue a follow-up (statement) confirming a radar-indicated tornado. I also had our communicator call the Ruston PD/Lincoln Parish Sheriff's Office to alert them of the radar confirmed tornado, which they confirmed themselves from the ground given the substantial damage reports coming in,” Hansford wrote.
TheNWS-Shreveportused all of the available data to redraw its warning boxes. It also provided Ruston residents with time. Tornado-warning sirens wailed and urgent statements came in a steady stream through weather radios.
“The data from this radar, alongside the spotter call, and frequent communication with the Bienville/Lincoln, and Union Parish Sheriff's offices during the event, was extremely beneficial and helped our office save so many lives during this event,” Hansford wrote.
“In fact, our office and the survey teams received numerous compliments from the public, city, parish and state officials with the long lead times leading up to the impacts on the city of Ruston.”
Without ’s radar, the National Weather Service would not have had a complete picture of what was happening on the ground in Ruston when, as Hansford writes, “this destructive tornado struck the city shortly before 2 a.m.when much of the city was sleeping.”
The warnings could not save property. Louisiana Tech suffered heavy damage, especially to the softball and soccer stadiums. Several homes and businesses were reduced to rubble.
Huge trees were uprooted and tragically, a mother and son were killed when a tree fell on their home.
But ’s role in the tornado detection and the saving of lives cannot be underestimated.
“The radar is becoming anindispensable tool as part of our warning operations for north central Louisiana and the surrounding areas,” said Mario D. Valverde, meteorologist in charge at the National Weather Service office in Shreveport.