Supercells
Supercells are - simply said - an agglomeration of several thunderstorm cells, which have aggregated to one big system. Compared to simple thunderstorm cells, stronger upwinds develop in the center of the agglomeration and stronger downwinds are observed on the edges. The wind can thereby reach speeds of more than 100 km/h horizontally above the ground and more than 300 km/h vertically within the clouds.
Supercells produce violent precipitation, hail showers and occasionally also Tornadoes.

Quelle: frank-wettert.de
Picture galerie
The pictures were taken during a "chase for supercells". They show something of the size of the storm which these supercells caused. click on a picture to show it fullsize.
 Wolkenwand
|  Entstehung eines Tornados
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 Tornado
|  Wolkenbruch in einer Superzelle
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|  Blitze in Superzellen
|  Blitze in Superzellen
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 Fahrzeug zum sicheren Beobachten
|  Die "Sturmjäger"
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Characterisation
| Attribute | Rotation of the upwind area, called Mesocyclonedes |
| | Up- and Downwind areas are spacially separated
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| Rotation | minimum 30 minutes |
| Types | LP-Supercells, classic Supercells and HP-Supercells |
LP-Supercell (low precipitation supercell)
- the precipitation field is mostly small and is limited to the nucleus. However, very big hail can appear, while tornados appear only rarely. This type often appears in the western Great Plains of the USA on the border of humid-warm air from the gulf of Mexico to dry-hot air from the southwest of the USA. In Central Europe, it is rather rare.
Classic Supercell
- the most frequent and typical form of supercells. The precipitation field is vaster than in the previous case and the nucleus with the strongest precipitation (strong rain and hail) generally wraps in a hook-shape around the meso-cyclone (hook echo). Tornados appear substantially more frequently with this type than with the LP-supercell.
HP supercell (high precipitation supercell)
- the most intensive precipitation form of supercells. The precipitation field is very much expanded and spreads strong rain or hail over a rather big area. The nucleus with the most intensive precipitation often shows a nephritic-shaped structure. The precipitation area largely surrounds the meso-cyclone and thereby sometimes covers the view of a possible tornado (bear's cage). These margin-wrapped tornados are especially dangerous and are responsible for most deaths in the USA.