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Average annual # of days with thunderstorms. Deaths from Natural Hazards in the US. Air mass thunderstorms: (90% of all t-storms are of this type) —occur as mT air masses are heated from below by warm land surfaces. --usually are of short duration and do not
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Deaths from Natural Hazards in the US
Air mass thunderstorms: (90% of all t-storms are of this type) —occur as mT air masses are heated from below by warm land surfaces --usually are of short duration and do not produce hail, damaging winds, or tornadoes --isolated distribution
Severe thunderstorms (10% of all t-storms are of this type) —may involve convection due to surface heating, but uplift is enhanced by frontal activity or orography --typically produce winds + 58 mph, andhail --storms may be aligned along a front
Life Cycle of a Thunderstorm 1. Cumulus stage—water vapor is moved aloft by updrafts; vertical cumulus development
Mature stage—once the cloud reaches the freezing level • precipitation forms via the Bergeron process; falling • precipitation produces a drag on the surrounding air causing • cold downdrafts; Entrainment—cold air from outside the storm • aloft is pulled into the storm and moves down as part of the downdraft
3. Dissipating stage—downdrafts dominate and moisture input from surface ceases
A roll cloud may signal the advance of a gust front
In some areas, the break up of a temperature inversion in the afternoon can lead to thunderstorm development
One thunderstorm can spawn other ‘daughter’ cells through the formation of a gust front
In summer, cT air masses from the arid SW US can be drawn into low-pressure systems in the Great Plains states. This creates a dryline boundary (between cT air and less dense mT air) where violent thunderstorms may develop.
if a dryline exists, • storm development • along the cold • front will be • minimal squall line: line of intense thunderstorms
Mesoscale Convective Complex— --a very large (~40,000 mi2) organized cluster of severe thunderstorms
Imbedded in a squall line or an MCC, large, rotating thunderstorms called mesocylcones may form (1/2 of all mesocyclones produce tornadoes)
Mesocyclone: (typically 10-30 miles wide and 70,000 feet tall!)
Hail forms as ice crystals are swept aloft numerous time by updrafts
Mircroburst—a narrow, high speed downdraft (may exceed 100 mph)
Downbursts can create straight-line winds called derechos (may be +100mph) • derechos are often • mistaken for tornadoes
Lightning –electrical stroke between oppositely charged particles • charge separation • is caused by • updrafts, downdrafts
if you feel • static electricity • like this person • get to a low • area immediately
Thunder—sound of air expanding upon heating by lightning strike (sound waves travel about 1000 ft/sec)