An example showing the Goldsby, Oklahoma EF4 tornado on May 24, 2011, in which the RFD was disrupted by a northward-moving wave. First, a left-moving supercell from north Texas approached the Goldsby supercell at near 65 nautical miles per hour. Outflow associated with the cell merger enhances vertical vorticity, causing the tornado to strengthen and reach peak intensity (panel 2). After the cell merger, a northward-moving wave associated with the left-mover, hit the Goldsby supercell’s RFD. The back edge of the RFD retreated northward (panels 4, 5 and 6), and eventually the backed flow associated with the northward-moving wave pushed the flanking line precipitation away from the mesocyclone (panels 7 and 8). This disrupted the RFD causing the tornado to dissipate.