sarangan
Pattern Altitude
- Joined
- Jun 7, 2008
- Messages
- 1,905
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Andrew, CFI-I
I am hoping some of you might be experts on this very useful weather product.
I asked this question to NOAA, but never got a response.
NOAA's interactive sounding charts also include a calculated parameter called CAPE (Convective Available Potential Energy). This is a very useful number that indicates the intensity of lifting action and hence the severity of thunderstorms. There is also another number called iCAPE (i stands for interactive). This is the CAPE for a parcel of air that is at a user-defined temperature. My confusion is that I can get CAPE=iCAPE only when I select a parcel temperature that is about 10C higher than the sounding data shown in the plot. For example, in the attached image, the temperature for 1050mb is 17C and CAPE is 90 J/g. I can get iCAPE of 89 J/g if I pick a 1050mb parcel temperature of 26C, which is 9C higher than the sounding data. Obviously I am missing something here.
I asked this question to NOAA, but never got a response.
NOAA's interactive sounding charts also include a calculated parameter called CAPE (Convective Available Potential Energy). This is a very useful number that indicates the intensity of lifting action and hence the severity of thunderstorms. There is also another number called iCAPE (i stands for interactive). This is the CAPE for a parcel of air that is at a user-defined temperature. My confusion is that I can get CAPE=iCAPE only when I select a parcel temperature that is about 10C higher than the sounding data shown in the plot. For example, in the attached image, the temperature for 1050mb is 17C and CAPE is 90 J/g. I can get iCAPE of 89 J/g if I pick a 1050mb parcel temperature of 26C, which is 9C higher than the sounding data. Obviously I am missing something here.