html5-img
1 / 53

Thunderstorms and Tornadoes

Chapter 14. Thunderstorms and Tornadoes. Thunderstorms. A storm containing lightening and thunder; convective storms Severe thunderstorms: one of large hail, wind gusts greater than or equal to 50kts, or tornado Ordinary Cell Thunderstorms Air-mass thunderstorms: limited wind sheer

MikeCarlo
Télécharger la présentation

Thunderstorms and Tornadoes

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Chapter 14 Thunderstorms and Tornadoes

  2. Thunderstorms • A storm containing lightening and thunder; convective storms • Severe thunderstorms: one of large hail, wind gusts greater than or equal to 50kts, or tornado • Ordinary Cell Thunderstorms • Air-mass thunderstorms: limited wind sheer • Stages: cumulus, mature, dissipating • Entrainment, downdraft, gust front

  3. Thunderstorms • Multi-cell Thunderstorms • Thunderstorms that contain a number of convection cells, each in a different stage of development, moderate to strong wind shear; tilt, over shooting top • Gust Front: leading edge of the cold air out-flowing air; shelf cloud, roll cloud, outflow boundary • Micro-bursts: localized downdraft that hits the ground and spreads horizontally in a radial burst of wind; wind shear, virga

  4. Thunderstorms • Multi-cell Thunderstorms • Squall-line thunderstorms; line of multi-cell thunderstorms, pre-frontal squall-line, derecho • Meso-scale Convective Complex: a number of individual multi-cell thunderstorms grow in size and organize into a large circular convective weather system; summer, 10,000km2

  5. Thunderstorms • Supercell thunderstorms • Large, long-lasting thunderstorm with a single rotating updraft • Strong vertical wind shear • Outflow never undercuts updraft • Classic, high precipitation and low precipitation supercells • Cap and convective instability • Rain free base, low-level jet • Surface, 850mb, 700mb, 500mb, 300mb conditions

  6. Thunderstorms • Thunderstorms and the Dryline • Sharp, horizontal change in moisture • Thunderstorms form just east of dryline • cP, mT, cT • Floods and Flash Floods • Flash floods rise rapidly with little or no advance warning; many times caused by stalled or slow thunderstorm • Large floods can be created by training of storm systems, Great Flood of 1993

  7. Thunderstorms • Topic: Big Thompson Canyon • July 31, 1976, 12 inches of rain in 4 hours created a flood associated with $35.5million in damage and 135 deaths • Distribution of Thunderstorms • Most frequent Florida, Gulf Coast, Central Plains • Fewest Pacific coast and Interior valleys • Most frequent hail Central Plains

  8. Thunderstorms • Lightening and Thunder • Lightening: discharge of electricity in mature storms (within cloud, cloud to cloud, cloud to ground) • Thunder: explosive expansion of air due to heat from lightening • Electrification of Clouds: graupel and hailstones fall through supercooled water, ice crystals become negatively charged • Upper cloud positive, bottom cloud negative

  9. Thunderstorms • Observations: Elves • Blue jets, red sprite, ELVES • The Lightening Stroke • Positive charge on ground, cloud to ground lightening • Stepped leader, ground stroke, forked lightening, ribbon lightening, bead lightening, corona discharge

  10. Thunderstorms • Observation: Apple tree • DO NOT seek shelter during a thunderstorm under an isolated tree. • Lightening Detection and Suppression • Lightening direction finder detects radiowaves produced by lightening, spherics • National Lightening Detection Network • Suppression: seed clouds with aluminum

  11. Tornadoes • Rapidly rotating column of air that blows around a small area of intense low pressure with a circulation that reaches the ground. • Tornado life cycle • Organizing, mature, shrinking, decay stage • Tornado outbreaks • Families, super outbreak

  12. Tornadoes • Tornado Occurrence • US experiences most tornadoes • Tornado Alley (warm, humid surface; cold dry air aloft) • Highest spring, lowest winter • Tornado winds • Measurement based upon damage after storm or Doppler radar • For southwest approaching storms, winds strongest in the northeast of the storm, 220 kts maximum • Multi-vortex tornados

  13. Tornadoes • Seeking shelter • Basement or small, interior room on ground floor • Indoor vs. outdoor pressure • The Fujita Scale • Based upon the damage created by a storm • F0 weakest, F5 strongest • Enhanced Fujita Scale

  14. Tornadic Formation • Basic requirements are an intense thunderstorm, conditional instability, and strong vertical wind shear • Supercell Tornadoes • Wind sheer causes spinning vortex tube that is pulled into thunderstorm by the updraft • Mesocyclone, BWER, rear flank downdraft, vertical stretching, funnel cloud, rotating cloud, wall cloud

  15. Stepped Art Fig. 14-46, p. 402

  16. Tornadic Formation • Nonsupercell Tornadoes • Gustnadoes • Land spout • Cold-air funnels

More Related