UW Madison researcher seeks key to predicting devastating 'supercell' storms
Posted: Jun 7, 2020 9:00 AM CST
-
2:10
Local sports bars welcome Packers fans for Thanksgiving Day camaraderie
-
2:44
CBS 58 goes inside the kitchen with volunteers as they prep to...
-
0:36
Smoke shop employee assaulted during robbery near Brady Street
-
0:21
Car straddles median at Hawley Road Bridge
-
2:26
Traffic in food pantries increases ahead of Thanksgiving, where...
-
1:11
Is this your dog? Searching for owner of dog found at Racine...
-
0:26
Emergency ’City-County Food Drive’ ends, collecting 9,000...
-
0:33
’All the Fixins’ event helps families stock up for Thanksgiving...
-
2:48
’Slender Man’ stabber back in Wisconsin after leaving group...
-
2:21
Winter parking regulations begin December 1 across the City of...
-
2:11
Lions and Packers fans feel out the tension ahead of game
-
1:59
Drivers push through slick roads and strong winds ahead of Thanksgiving
MADISON, Wis. (CBS 58) -- As storm chasers head out on the open roads this severe weather season a UW-Madison atmospheric scientist is staying put, tweaking his computer modeling to find out if he can predict the world's most devastating weather events known as supercells.
On CBS 58 Sunday Morning, Michael Schlesinger chatted with Dr. Leigh Orf to find out what he’s working on and how his findings can benefit us all.
Sign up for the CBS 58 Newsletter