Thunderstorms force the evacuation and cancellation of an outdoor concert in Nashville
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GOES-16 “Clean” Infrared Window (10.3 µm) images [click to play animated GIF| MP4]
A George Strait concert at an outdoor stadium (Nissan Stadium) in Nashville, Tennessee was cancelled by a forced evacuation — due to approaching thunderstorms — just before 10 PM local time on 29 July 2023 (0300 UTC on 30 July). GOES-16 (GOES-East) “Clean” Infrared Window (10.3 µm) images (above) showed (1) the dissipation and departure of an initial cluster of thunderstorms near Nashville (those storms caused a delay in the start of the concert, with a shelter-in-place warning being issued by stadium officials just before 5 PM local time or 2200 UTC — which was then lifted about 45 minutes later, allowing the concert to begin at its originally-scheduled time), and (2) the development of a new cluster of thunderstorms in north-central Tennessee shortly after 9 PM local time or 0200 UTC, which then approached the Nashville area. The coldest cloud-top infrared brightness temperatures were around -70ºC (brighter white pixels embedded within darker black regions).
GOES-16 Infrared images that included an overlay of GLM Flash Extent Density and contours of Lightning Cast Probability (below) revealed an appreciable amount of lightning activity with these 2 clusters of thunderstorms (which was the primary concern for both the initial shelter-in-place warning prior to the concert start time, and the second shelter-in-place warning that led to the concert cancellation). There was a tight gradient in the contours of LightningCast Probability along the leading edge of the second cluster of thunderstorms as it approached Nashville.
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GOES-16 “Clean” Infrared Window (10.3 µm) images, with an overlay of GLM Flash Extent Density and LightningCast Probability contours [click to play animated GIF| MP4]
A time series of LightningCast Probability for Nashville International Airport KBNA (below) includes plots of GLM Flash Counts within a 5 and 10 mile radius of the airport — and showed that LightingCast Probabilities began to increase 30-40 minutes prior to nearby GLM Flash Counts. KBNA is located about 5.5 miles southeast of Nissan Stadium.
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Time series of LightningCast Probability for Nashville International Airport. with plots of GLM Flash Counts within a 5 and 10 mile radius of the airport (courtesy John Cintineo, CIMSS) [click to enlarge]
Note the “Lightning Advisory” headline that was displayed on the stadium’s big screen as the thunderstorms were approaching at the end of the concert: