Download Severe Thunderstorms

Survey
yes no Was this document useful for you?
   Thank you for your participation!

* Your assessment is very important for improving the work of artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project

Document related concepts
no text concepts found
Transcript
Thunderstorms
- form in unstable atmosphere
- usually warm moist air near surface forced to rise
• Ordinary (Air-Mass) Thunderstorms
- last relatively short time ~ 1 hour
- downdrafts overwhelm updrafts and storm weakens
• Severe Thunderstorms
- need vertical wind shear to form
- updrafts and downdrafts are separate
==> storm can last much longer and intensify
SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS
Z
0
WIND
3
Storm motion
4
2
"Shelf Cloud" forms
on side with updrafts
6
1
5
(0) Presence of vertical wind shear
(1) Updrafts on one side of cloud
(2) Due to wind shear, updrafts slant into upper cloud
(3) Droplets/crystals grow => fall on other side of cloud => drag induces downdraft
(4) Entrainment of dry air => evaporation (cooling) => enhances downdraft
(5) Downdraft hits surface => spreads => creates gust front
(6) Shelf cloud often forms on side with updrafts
SUPER-CELL THUNDERSTORMS AND TORNADOES
noted for extremely strong updrafts
Favorable Conditions:
- Vertical wind shear (change in speed with height)
=> helps produce severe thunderstorm
- Change in wind direction with height
=> helps rotate updrafts
Conditions often found in US Midwest during Spring just ahead of cold front
TORNADO
Rotating updraft can produce Mesocyclone:
- 5-10 km system within Severe Thunderstorm
- may produce Wall Cloud
- Tornadoes often form within Wall Cloud
Wall Cloud
Wall Cloud
TORNADO FREQUENCY
F2 strength or greater
Thunderstorm Frequency
F4 strength or greater
© Jim Leonard
Clicker Question
Set Frequency to "BB"
Why doesn't Lightning form in shallow
Marine Stratus Clouds?
(A) cloud air is too warm
(B) cloud air is too cold
(C) temperature range of cloud air is too narrow
Clicker Question
Set Frequency to "BB"
Why doesn't Lightning form in shallow
Marine Stratus Clouds?
(A) cloud air is too warm
(B) cloud air is too cold
(C) temperature range of cloud air is too narrow
Hurricane Katrina on August 28, 2005
HURRICANE CROSS-SECTIONAL VIEW
ANTI-CYCLONIC FLOW OUT OF HURRICANE AT TOP OF STORM
CLOUDS
CYCLONIC FLOW INTO HURRICANE AT SURFACE
EYE
FASTEST WINDS IN THE EYEWALL
- Hurricane consists of many cloud bands
- upward moving air inside clouds
- downward moving air in between clouds and in eye
- Inflow at surface is cyclonic (CCW in NH)
- Outflow at top is anticyclonic (CW in NH)
- Hurricane is fueled from below (warm moist air) and exhaust is
at top.