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Radar Facts
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Typical Hook Pattern
Figure 5-42
The hooks are located at the right rear side of the thunderstorm echo’s
direction of movement (usually the southwest quadrant).
The hook is not the tornado echo! A small scale low pressure area is
centered at the right rear side of the thunderstorm echo near its edge.
The low usually ranges from about 3 to 10 miles in diameter.
Precipitation is drawn around the low’s cyclonic circulation to form the
characteristic hook shape. Tornadoes form within the low near hook.
According tostatistics from the NSSL,almost 60 percentof allobserved
hook echoeshave tornadoes associated withthem. A tornado is always
suspected when a hook echo is seen.
A hook can form with no tornadoes and vice versa. However, when a
bona fide hook is observed on a weather radar, moderate or greater
turbulence, strong shifting surface winds, and hail are often nearby and
aircraft should avoid them.