User:Master of TimeFrom Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia More information Personal Details, Wikimedia ... Master of Time 27,000+This user has made more than 27,000 contributions to Wikipedia. 15,000+This user has made over 15,000 contributions to Wikipedia Personal Details This user is a citizen of the United States of America. It is approximately 10:46 PM where this user lives. It is approximately 10:46 PM in this user's locale. (Purge to update.) Wikimedia 3416This user is ranked 3416 on the list of Wikipedians by number of edits (as of February 16, 2017). This user is a Wikipedian. This user has autoconfirmed rights on the English Wikipedia. (verify) This user has extended confirmed rights on the English Wikipedia. (verify) This user has pending changes reviewer rights on the English Wikipedia. (verify) This user has rollback rights on the English Wikipedia. (verify) This user has autopatrolled rights on the English Wikipedia. (verify) This user has AutoWikiBrowser rights on the English Wikipedia. (verify) This editor is a Senior Editor and is entitled to display this Rhodium Editor Star. This user watches over Wikipedia with the help of Navigation popups! This user watches over Wikipedia with the help of Twinkle! This user is a member of WikiProject Meteorology. This user is a participant in WikiProject Earthquakes. This user contributes to Wikimedia Commons. This user account is secured with a unique committed identity. Close Talk · Contributions · Subpages · Sandbox · Edit Count *Caption: Storm system over the United States as viewed at 13:30 UTC on May 20, 2019. This image was taken on the day of a Storm Prediction Center-issued High Risk; this is the highest possible risk available in the SPC's categorical outlooks. This day saw the outlining of a 45% tornado risk area for Oklahoma City and areas west. Later this same day, Particularly Dangerous Situation (PDS) Tornado Watch 199 was issued; this was only the second time the Storm Prediction Center ever issued a watch with fully maxed-out (at >95%) severe hazard (tornado, wind, hail) probabilities, along with Watch 235 in Alabama during the 2011 Super Outbreak. Ultimately, despite the extremely favorable ingredients for severe weather in place, the outbreak did not turn out nearly as many tornadoes (including strong to violent and long-track tornadoes) as expected. This was no regular forecast "bust" though; had the unanticipated mitigating factors (including complications from a cap advected in from Mexico) been removed, this outbreak could have gone so far as to even eclipse the major outbreak that occurred on May 3, 1999. For these reasons, despite being a day that did not have outstanding activity, it was a historic day.*Image Credit: National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration Environmental Visualization Laboratory, taken from GOES-16 This box: viewtalkedit
More information Personal Details, Wikimedia ... Master of Time 27,000+This user has made more than 27,000 contributions to Wikipedia. 15,000+This user has made over 15,000 contributions to Wikipedia Personal Details This user is a citizen of the United States of America. It is approximately 10:46 PM where this user lives. It is approximately 10:46 PM in this user's locale. (Purge to update.) Wikimedia 3416This user is ranked 3416 on the list of Wikipedians by number of edits (as of February 16, 2017). This user is a Wikipedian. This user has autoconfirmed rights on the English Wikipedia. (verify) This user has extended confirmed rights on the English Wikipedia. (verify) This user has pending changes reviewer rights on the English Wikipedia. (verify) This user has rollback rights on the English Wikipedia. (verify) This user has autopatrolled rights on the English Wikipedia. (verify) This user has AutoWikiBrowser rights on the English Wikipedia. (verify) This editor is a Senior Editor and is entitled to display this Rhodium Editor Star. This user watches over Wikipedia with the help of Navigation popups! This user watches over Wikipedia with the help of Twinkle! This user is a member of WikiProject Meteorology. This user is a participant in WikiProject Earthquakes. This user contributes to Wikimedia Commons. This user account is secured with a unique committed identity. Close Talk · Contributions · Subpages · Sandbox · Edit Count *Caption: Storm system over the United States as viewed at 13:30 UTC on May 20, 2019. This image was taken on the day of a Storm Prediction Center-issued High Risk; this is the highest possible risk available in the SPC's categorical outlooks. This day saw the outlining of a 45% tornado risk area for Oklahoma City and areas west. Later this same day, Particularly Dangerous Situation (PDS) Tornado Watch 199 was issued; this was only the second time the Storm Prediction Center ever issued a watch with fully maxed-out (at >95%) severe hazard (tornado, wind, hail) probabilities, along with Watch 235 in Alabama during the 2011 Super Outbreak. Ultimately, despite the extremely favorable ingredients for severe weather in place, the outbreak did not turn out nearly as many tornadoes (including strong to violent and long-track tornadoes) as expected. This was no regular forecast "bust" though; had the unanticipated mitigating factors (including complications from a cap advected in from Mexico) been removed, this outbreak could have gone so far as to even eclipse the major outbreak that occurred on May 3, 1999. For these reasons, despite being a day that did not have outstanding activity, it was a historic day.*Image Credit: National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration Environmental Visualization Laboratory, taken from GOES-16 This box: viewtalkedit