MANOA — A record-setting rainstorm over Kaua‘i in April 2018 resulted in severe flash flooding and estimated damage of nearly $180 million.
The deluge damaged or destroyed 532 homes, and landslides left people along Kaua‘i’s north coast without access to their homes for months.
In a published study, atmospheric scientists at the University of Hawai‘i at Manoa revealed that severe supercell thunderstorms were to blame.
The rainstorm inundated some areas with nearly 50 inches of rainfall in a 24-hour period, smashing the previous 24-hour U.S. rainfall record of 42 inches set in Texas in 1979.
An interesting finding is that the rainstorm described in this paper was associated with a Kona low and not a tropical cyclone as featured in previous U.S. rainfall records.
Terrence Corrigan, a doctoral candidate, and professor Steven Businger, both in the Department of Atmospheric Sciences at the UH Manoa School of Ocean and Earth Science and Technology, sifted through copious weather-radar data from National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration’s National Weather Service to unveil the factors contributing to this historic event.
Their analysis revealed large changes in the direction and speed of the winds in the lower atmosphere. When these shifting winds collided with Kaua‘i’s steep cliffs, thunderstorms with rotating updrafts were triggered. The scale of rotation seen in radar data and the strength of rainfall seen as reflectivity echoes are consistent with supercell thunderstorms.
“This finding was a surprise, which has interesting implications for other mountainous areas of the world,” said Businger.
“Updrafts with rotation are more intense and longer lived, and have been observed to produce large hail and tornadoes in Hawai‘i,” said Businger. “In this case, the updrafts were forced by Kaua‘i’s steep mountain cliffs, with the result that the thunderstorms were more vigorous and anchored to the terrain, thus setting a new U.S. 24-hour rainfall record.”
Although supercell thunderstorms are the least common type of thunderstorm in Hawai‘i, they have the greatest likelihood of producing severe weather, including large hail, tornadoes and strong, straight-line winds.
“Understanding the dynamic interaction of our tropical atmosphere and steep mountains will help weather forecasters better anticipate severe weather events and flash floods in our state and elsewhere,” added Businger.
Businger and Corrigan’s next steps are to use high-resolution computer models to simulate the interaction between various wind flows and terrain configurations to further shed light on the interaction of mountains and severe thunderstorms.