Getty photographer Drew Angerer joined a group of researchers chasing supercell thunderstorms to see how tornadoes form.
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Meteorologists from the Center for Severe Weather Research began their annual field research project this week, pursuing supercell storms and watching for the formation of tornadoes. A supercell--usually, but not necessarily, a thunderstorm--contains a deep and persistent rotating updraft called a mesocyclone.
Above: A meteorologist on the team watches as a supercell thunderstorm bears down on the area on May 9, 2017 in Lamb County, Texas.
— Drew Angerer / Getty Images
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The Doppler on Wheels vehicle scans a supercell thunderstorm in Elbert County near Agate, Colo. The truck can carry the radar directly into storms, allowing scientists to scan storms and tornadoes and make 3-D maps of wind and debris.
— Drew Angerer / Getty Images
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Research team members observe a supercell thunderstorm in Lamb County, Texas.
— Drew Angerer / Getty Images
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Tim Marshall, a 40-year veteran of storm chasing, watches a supercell near Agate, Colo.
The team hopes that gaining knowledge about tornado formation and structure will result in better predictions, saving lives and property.
— Drew Angerer / Getty Images
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Support scientist Rachel Humphrey monitors a supercell from the tornado scout vehicle near Agate, Colo.
— Drew Angerer / Getty Images
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A tornado scout vehicle and the Doppler on Wheels vehicle chase after a storm in Olustee, Okla.
— Drew Angerer / Getty Images
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Cloud-to-ground lightning strikes during a supercell thunderstorm in Lamb County, Texas.
— Drew Angerer / Getty Images
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Marcus Gutierrez, driver of the Doppler vehicle, plays catch in a Walmart parking lot while waiting for severe thunderstorms to develop in Childress, Texas.
— Drew Angerer / Getty Images
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Tim Marshall looks out the window of a tornado scout vehicle as the group tracks a supercell thunderstorm in Quanah, Texas.
Marshall became interested in weather after an F-4 tornado passed about a half-mile from his home in Oak Lawn, Illinois, when he was ten years old. The 1967 tornado killed 33 people and injured 500.
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Center for Severe Weather Research intern Hunter Anderson prepares tornado pods as a severe thunderstorm moves into the area in Paducah, Texas.
The storm did not produce a tornado, but the group was prepared to deploy the pods if one developed. The pods are heavy, metal discs with instruments that measure and map winds at ground level.
— Drew Angerer / Getty Images
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Mammatus clouds, often associated with severe thunderstorms, hover in the sky behind a horse near Clovis, New Mexico.
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Hunter Anderson, left, a meteorology student at St. Cloud State University, and support scientist Tim Marshall look at radar and storm models on a smartphone on outside of Limon, Colo.
— Drew Angerer / Getty Images
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Hunter Anderson consults with Rachel Humphrey, support scientist and driver of a tornado scout vehicle, as a supercell thunderstorm bears down on the area in Lamb County, Texas.
— Drew Angerer / Getty Images
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A supercell thunderstorm develops in Elbert County outside of Limon, Colo.