AOSC 200 Lesson 10 - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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AOSC 200 Lesson 10

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Title: AOSC 200 Lesson 10


1
AOSC 200Lesson 10
2
Visible image of super thunderstorm from GEO
satellite
Fig. 11.2a
3
IR image of the same super thunderstorm
Fig. 11.2b
4
Fig. 11-1, p. 312
5
THUNDERSTORM
  • IS A CLOUD OR CLUSTER OF CLOUDS THAT PRODUCES
    THUNDER, LIGHTNING, HEAVY RAIN, AND SOMETIMES
    HAIL AND TORNADOS
  • CAN DIVIDE THUNDERSTORMS INTO TWO MAIN TYPES
  • ISOLATED THUNDERSTORMS PRODUCED WITHIN A WARM
    HUMID AIR MASS
  • SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS PRODUCED BY FORCEFUL
    LIFTING
  • IN THE USA, AIRMASS THUNDERSTORMS GENERALLY
    OCCUR IN WARM MOIST AIR - mT
  • LIFTING CAN BE BY FRONTS OR OROGRAPHICALLY

6
Lifted Index
  • A parcel of air will not rise unless it is
    unstable.
  • The lifted index follows a parcel of air as it is
    lifted from the surface and cools at the dry
    adiabatic lapse rate until saturation occurs, and
    then cools at the wet adiabatic lapse rate.
  • The lifted index is defined as
  • The environmental temperature at 500 mb minus
    the temperature of the parcel of air when lifted
    to 500 mb
  • If the lifted index is negative then the
    atmosphere is unstable.
  • Severe thunderstorms require a lifting index less
    than -3

7

Stepped Art
Fig. 7-6, p. 175
8
Life cycle of an ordinary thunderstorm cell
Fig. 11.7
9
THUNDERSTORM CUMULUS STAGE
  • CUMULUS STAGE
  • REQUIRES CONTINUOUS SOURCE OF WARM MOIST AIR
  • EACH NEW SURGE OF WARM AIR RISES HIGHER THAN THE
    LAST
  • STRONG UPDRAFTS
  • FALLING PRECIPITATION DRAGS AIR DOWN - DOWNDRAFT
  • ENTRAINMENT

10
THUNDERSTORM MATURE STAGE
  • SHARP COOL GUSTS AT SURFACE SIGNAL DOWNDRAFTS
  • UPDRAFTS EXIST SIDE BY SIDE WITH DOWNDRAFTS
  • IF CLOUD TOP REACHES TROPOPAUSE UPDRAFTS SPREAD
    LATERALLY - ANVIL SHAPE
  • TOP OF ICE LADEN CIRRUS CLOUDS
  • GUSTY WINDS, LIGHTNING, HEAVY PRECIPITATION, HAIL

11
THUNDERSTORM DISSIPATING STAGE
  • DOWNDRAFT AND ENTRAINMENT DOMINATE
  • NO UPDRAFT
  • THUNDERSTORM LOSES ENERGY SOURCE

12
An ordinary airmass thunderstorm
Fig. 11.8
13
Table 11-1, p. 315
14
THUNDERSTORM GROWTH AND DEVELOPMENT
  • AIR NEEDS TO BE UNSTABLE
  • DRYLINE - LINE BETWEEN cT AND mT AIR MASSES-LEADS
    TO UNSTABLE AIR
  • LIFTED INDEX IS NEGATIVE, AIR IS UNSTABLE
  • VERTICAL WIND SHEAR CAN SPIN UP THUNDERSTORM
  • SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS - mT MEETS Cp.
  • GREATEST CONTRAST - SPRING AND EARLY SUMMER

15
A climatology of the average number of
thunderstorm days in a year
Fig. 11-3, p. 314
16
Fig. 11-4, p. 315
17
Schematic of a multicell thunderstorm. Red arrows
represent the warm updraft, blue arrows the cool
downdraft
Fig. 11-10, p. 320
18
Squall Line
  • Is a set of individual intense thunderstorm cells
    arranged in a line.
  • They occur along a boundary of unstable air
    e.g. a cold front.
  • Strong environmental wind shear causes the
    updraft to be tilted and separated from the
    downdraft.
  • The dense cold air of the downdraft forms a gust
    front.

19
Pre-frontal squall lines may form ahead of an
advancing cold front as the air aloft forms waves
downwind from the cold front
20
Squall line associate with a cold front.
Fig. 11.10a
21
Fig. 11.13
22
Mesoscale Convective Complex
  • A Mesoscale Convective Complex is composed of
    multiple single-cell storms in different stages
    of development.
  • The individual thunderstorms must support the
    formation of other convective cells
  • In order to last a long time, a good supply of
    moisture is required at low levels in the
    atmosphere.

23
Infrared image of a mesoscale convective complex
over Kansas, July 8 1997.
Fig. 11-13, p. 322
24
SUPERCELL THUNDERSTORM
  • SINGLE CELL THUNDERSTORM THAT PRODUCES DANGEROUS
    WEATHER
  • REQUIRES A VERY UNSTABLE ATMOSPHERE AND STRONG
    VERTICAL WIND SHEAR - BOTH SPEED AND DIRECTION
  • UNDER THE INFLUENCE OF THE STRONG WIND SHEAR THE
    ENTIRE THUNDERSTORM ROTATES
  • FAVORED REGION IS THE SOUTHERN GREAT PLAINS IN
    THE SPRING

25
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27
TYPE OF THUNDERSTORM
  • SINGLE-CELL THUNDERSTORM
  • MULTICELL THUNDERSTORM
  • MESOSCALE CONVECTIVE C0MPLEX
  • SUPERCELL THUNDERSTORM

28
Tornado over College Park, 10/23/01
29
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30
Box 11-1, p. 329
31
http//www.youtube.com/watch?v43VoMesUd2Qhttp//w
ww.youtube.com/watch?v43VoMesUd2Q
32
Geographic distribution of the month of maximum
tornado threa.t
Fig. 11-30, p. 337
33
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34
TORNADO
  • DERIVED FROM SPANISH WORD TORNADA
    THUNDERSTORM
  • TORNADOS ARISE FROM SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS
  • MOST TORNADOS IN CENTRAL US
  • ON AVERAGE ABOUT 770 TORNADOS ARE REPORTED
    ANNUALLY
  • OCCUR MAINLY FROM APRIL TO JUNE BUT ALL YEAR ROUND

35
Fig. 11.18
36
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37
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38
TORNADO
  • LESS THAN 1.6 KM WIDE, AND SHORT LIVED
  • NO ONE REALLY KNOWS HOW THEY ARE FORMED
  • MOST DROP DOWN FROM SUPERCELL THUNDERSTORMS -
    ROTATING
  • HOWEVER THIS ROTATION CANNOT EXPLAIN THE FAST
    ROTATION OF A TORNADO
  • THE HORIZONTAL ROTATION OF THE THUNDERSTORM IS
    CONVERTED INTO VERTICAL ROTATION OF THE TORNADO

39
TORNADO
  • TRAVELS AT ABOUT 45 KM PER HOUR AND CUTS A PATH
    OF ABOUT 26 KM LONG
  • BUT REALLY NO SUCH THING AS AN AVERAGE TORNADO
  • PRESSURE AT CENTER OF VORTEX AS MUCH AS 30 LOWER
    THAN SURROUNDINGS.
  • AIR RUSHES IN FROM SURROUNDINGS AND IS SPIRALED
    UPWARD.
  • CONSERVATIONOF ANGULAR MOMENTUM
  • BECAUSE OF TREMENDOUS PRESSURE GRADIENT WINDS CAN
    REACH 400 KM (250 MILES) PER HOUR.

40
Fig. 11-23, p. 331
41
STAGES OF A TORNADO
  • ORGANIZING STAGE - FUNNEL CLOUD DROPS DOWN TO THE
    SURFACE
  • MATURE STAGE - TORNADO AT PEAK INTENSITY AND
    WIDTH
  • SHRINKING STAGE
  • ROPE STAGE

42
Table 11-3, p. 333
43
Fig. 11-25, p. 333
44
Fig. 11-33, p. 342
45
  • http//www.youtube.com/watch?vToY11hHpAJk
    http//www.youtube.com/watch?vToY11hHpAJk

46
LIGHTNING
  • .LARGE ELECTRICAL DISCHARGE THAT RESULTS FROM
    RISING AND SINKING MOTIONS IN A THUNDERSTORM
  • .SEQUENCE IS AS FOLLOWS
  • . CHARGE SEPARATION - REALLY DO NOT UNDERSTAND
    WHY
  • . GROUND BECOMES POSITIVELY CHARGED
  • . LIGHTNIING FORMATION BEGINS - LEADERS
  • . LIGHTNING FLASH OCCURS

47
Lightning formation Charge separation.
Fig. 11.28
48
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50
Fig. 11-37, p. 346
51
Life cycle and path of a hailstone in a supercell
thunderstorm
Fig. 11-38, p. 346
52
HAIL
  • LARGE CLUMPS OR BALLS OF ICE
  • START OF AS A SMALL ICE PARTICLE
  • DUE TO UPDRAFT THE ICE PARTICLE DOES NOT FALL TO
    GROUND BUT IS RECYCLED INTO THE FREEZING PORTION
    OF THE THUNDERSTORM,
  • EACH TIME IT IS TAKEN UPWARD IT ACCUMULATES MORE
    ICE
  • CAN END UP AS LARGE AS A GRAPEFRUIT

53
Number of days per year with Hail gt .75 inch
Fig. 11.33
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