Total Totals Index Calculator

Compute Total Totals, Cross Totals, and Vertical Totals fast. Switch units and inspect values easily. See interpretations, sample data, exports, formulas, and plotted trends.

Calculator Inputs

Enter 850 mb temperature, 850 mb dew point, and 500 mb temperature. Choose your unit system, result precision, and graph sweep settings.

Environmental temperature at 850 mb.
Moisture term used by the CT component.
Mid-level temperature controlling stability.
All values are converted internally to °C.
Controls displayed precision.
Graph uses ± this span around 500 mb temperature.
Smaller steps create a denser curve.
Clear

Formula Used

Total Totals combines a lapse-rate term and a moisture term. The lapse-rate part is Vertical Totals, while the moisture-sensitive part is Cross Totals.

VT = T850 − T500 CT = Td850 − T500 TT = VT + CT = T850 + Td850 − 2 × T500

Where:

How to Use This Calculator

  1. Enter the 850 mb temperature from a sounding or model output.
  2. Enter the 850 mb dew point in the same unit system.
  3. Enter the 500 mb temperature.
  4. Select Celsius, Fahrenheit, or Kelvin.
  5. Choose display precision and graph sweep settings.
  6. Press the calculate button.
  7. Review VT, CT, TT, interpretation, and the sensitivity chart.
  8. Export the result summary as CSV or PDF when needed.

Example Data Table

Case T850 (°C) Td850 (°C) T500 (°C) VT CT TT General Reading
Stable Example 8 2 -8 16 10 26 Limited thunderstorm potential
Active Example 18 14 -10 28 24 52 Heavy convection / few severe
Very Unstable Example 22 18 -12 34 30 64 Very strong convective support

Frequently Asked Questions

1) What does the Total Totals Index measure?

It is a meteorological stability indicator using 850 mb temperature, 850 mb dew point, and 500 mb temperature. It estimates whether the atmosphere may support thunderstorm development.

2) What inputs do I need?

You need temperature at 850 mb, dew point at 850 mb, and temperature at 500 mb. These usually come from upper-air soundings or forecast model data.

3) Can I enter Fahrenheit or Kelvin?

Yes. The calculator accepts Celsius, Fahrenheit, and Kelvin. It converts everything internally to Celsius before calculating VT, CT, and TT.

4) What are VT and CT?

VT is Vertical Totals, equal to T850 minus T500. CT is Cross Totals, equal to Td850 minus T500. Their sum produces Total Totals.

5) Does a high TT guarantee severe weather?

No. TT is only one indicator. Lift, wind shear, moisture depth, capping, and storm forcing all matter. Use TT with broader forecast analysis.

6) Why is dew point included at 850 mb?

The 850 mb dew point represents lower-tropospheric moisture. More moisture often supports stronger convection, so it is included through the CT component.

7) Why does colder 500 mb air increase TT?

A colder mid-level temperature steepens the lapse rate and raises both VT and CT. That usually increases instability and pushes TT upward.

8) Can I export results from this page?

Yes. After calculation, use the CSV or PDF buttons to save a quick summary of your entered values, derived terms, and interpretation.

Notes

Related Calculators

solar zenith angle calculatorday length calculatormoist air specific heat calculatorblackbody radiance calculatorlatent heat of vaporization calculatordry adiabatic lapse rate calculatornet radiation calculatoratmospheric lapse rate calculatorsweat index calculatorsolar azimuth angle calculator

Important Note: All the Calculators listed in this site are for educational purpose only and we do not guarentee the accuracy of results. Please do consult with other sources as well.