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Chapter 11: severe weather!! (a)thunderstorms (classification) (b)tornadoes (c)lightning, and (d)hail

Chapter 11: severe weather!! (a)thunderstorms (classification) (b)tornadoes (c)lightning, and (d)hail

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Page 1: Chapter 11: severe weather!! (a)thunderstorms (classification) (b)tornadoes (c)lightning, and (d)hail

Chapter 11: severe weather!!

(a) thunderstorms (classification)(b) tornadoes(c) lightning, and (d) hail

Page 2: Chapter 11: severe weather!! (a)thunderstorms (classification) (b)tornadoes (c)lightning, and (d)hail

Thunderstorm classificationa brief review

th e re a re 3 ba s ic type s o f thu n de rs to rm s

a irm a ss ts(s in g le -ce ll, o rd in a ry)

m u lt i-ce ll ts su p e rce ll ts

in d iv id u a l th u nd e rsto rm s

Page 3: Chapter 11: severe weather!! (a)thunderstorms (classification) (b)tornadoes (c)lightning, and (d)hail

Thunderstorms often cluster into systems 100 miles or more in size.

These are called mesoscale convective systems.

MCSs come in many shapes, including squall lines, bow echoes and MCC (complexes).

Page 4: Chapter 11: severe weather!! (a)thunderstorms (classification) (b)tornadoes (c)lightning, and (d)hail

Fig. 11.2a

Page 5: Chapter 11: severe weather!! (a)thunderstorms (classification) (b)tornadoes (c)lightning, and (d)hail

Fig. 11.2b

Page 6: Chapter 11: severe weather!! (a)thunderstorms (classification) (b)tornadoes (c)lightning, and (d)hail

Airmass Thunderstorms

Page 7: Chapter 11: severe weather!! (a)thunderstorms (classification) (b)tornadoes (c)lightning, and (d)hail

Photo by NSSL

Page 8: Chapter 11: severe weather!! (a)thunderstorms (classification) (b)tornadoes (c)lightning, and (d)hail

Airmass thunderstorms have a life cycle … with three stages

Page 9: Chapter 11: severe weather!! (a)thunderstorms (classification) (b)tornadoes (c)lightning, and (d)hail

Mature airmass thunderstorms over the Pacific seen by the Space Shuttle

Page 10: Chapter 11: severe weather!! (a)thunderstorms (classification) (b)tornadoes (c)lightning, and (d)hail

Airmass Thunderstorms

• These are scattered small thunderstorms that form in mainly summer.

• They typically develop in warm, moist air masses away far from any fronts.

• They occur when the winds aloft are weak (little wind shear)

• They are also typically short-lived and rarely produce extreme winds and/or hail.

Page 11: Chapter 11: severe weather!! (a)thunderstorms (classification) (b)tornadoes (c)lightning, and (d)hail

The reason why an airmass thunderstorms is so shortlived is that there is little wind shear, therefore the rainy downdraft

quickly undercuts and chokes off the updraft.

Photo by Moller

Page 12: Chapter 11: severe weather!! (a)thunderstorms (classification) (b)tornadoes (c)lightning, and (d)hail

Multicell Thunderstorms

• Life cycle of any one of the cells of a multicell thunderstorm is like any air-mass thunderstorm.

• The life cycle of the multicell is much different due to the interaction of the cells one with another.

• The key to the long life of the multicell is the development of the gust front.

Page 13: Chapter 11: severe weather!! (a)thunderstorms (classification) (b)tornadoes (c)lightning, and (d)hail
Page 14: Chapter 11: severe weather!! (a)thunderstorms (classification) (b)tornadoes (c)lightning, and (d)hail

Shelf cloud – some examples

Page 15: Chapter 11: severe weather!! (a)thunderstorms (classification) (b)tornadoes (c)lightning, and (d)hail
Page 16: Chapter 11: severe weather!! (a)thunderstorms (classification) (b)tornadoes (c)lightning, and (d)hail

Fig. 11.11

Page 17: Chapter 11: severe weather!! (a)thunderstorms (classification) (b)tornadoes (c)lightning, and (d)hail
Page 18: Chapter 11: severe weather!! (a)thunderstorms (classification) (b)tornadoes (c)lightning, and (d)hail

Multicell Thunderstorms

• Shelf Cloud often indicates rising air over the gust front.

• New cells develop in front of the storm.

• Gust front maintained by the cool downdrafts.

• Gust front appears like a mesoscale cold front.

• Same effects of pressure check, temperature drop, and wind shift upon passage.

• Outflow boundary is the remnant of a gust front.

Page 19: Chapter 11: severe weather!! (a)thunderstorms (classification) (b)tornadoes (c)lightning, and (d)hail

Multicell - cont'doutflow boundary as seen by ground-based radar

Page 20: Chapter 11: severe weather!! (a)thunderstorms (classification) (b)tornadoes (c)lightning, and (d)hail

Photo by Moller

Page 21: Chapter 11: severe weather!! (a)thunderstorms (classification) (b)tornadoes (c)lightning, and (d)hail

MeteorologyToday Quit

Chapter Menu

Thunderstorm Movement

1 Developing cell2 Mature thunderstorm3 Dissipating thunderstorm

Upper-level wind

Dry air

Warm, moist surface air

EW

S

N1

1

1

2

23

Multicell storms move slightly to the right of the upper-level wind

Multicell movement

youngcell

oldcell

Photo by Doswell

Page 22: Chapter 11: severe weather!! (a)thunderstorms (classification) (b)tornadoes (c)lightning, and (d)hail

south north

Page 23: Chapter 11: severe weather!! (a)thunderstorms (classification) (b)tornadoes (c)lightning, and (d)hail

Why do new cells form mainly on the southern side ?

Page 24: Chapter 11: severe weather!! (a)thunderstorms (classification) (b)tornadoes (c)lightning, and (d)hail

Supercell Thunderstorms• occur most frequently in the southern

Great Plains in spring.• compared to single cells, supercells are:

– rare– longer-lived– larger– organized with separate up- and

downdrafts.

Page 25: Chapter 11: severe weather!! (a)thunderstorms (classification) (b)tornadoes (c)lightning, and (d)hail

LP

photo credit:Nguyen

Page 26: Chapter 11: severe weather!! (a)thunderstorms (classification) (b)tornadoes (c)lightning, and (d)hail

Photo by Bill McCaul

low-precipitation supercells

Page 27: Chapter 11: severe weather!! (a)thunderstorms (classification) (b)tornadoes (c)lightning, and (d)hail

LP supercell

Page 28: Chapter 11: severe weather!! (a)thunderstorms (classification) (b)tornadoes (c)lightning, and (d)hail

photo credit:Nguyen

HP

Page 29: Chapter 11: severe weather!! (a)thunderstorms (classification) (b)tornadoes (c)lightning, and (d)hail

weak echo region (WER) in a supercell storm

• As the storm intensifies, the updraft becomes stronger and more erect.

• The result are:– the development of mid-level

echo overhang (WER)– a tighter reflectivity gradient

(hail is most common just north of the WER)

– a shift in cloud top position (right above the WER)

Page 30: Chapter 11: severe weather!! (a)thunderstorms (classification) (b)tornadoes (c)lightning, and (d)hail

Weak vs strong thunderstorm

Page 31: Chapter 11: severe weather!! (a)thunderstorms (classification) (b)tornadoes (c)lightning, and (d)hail

supercell - seen by ground-based radar

Page 32: Chapter 11: severe weather!! (a)thunderstorms (classification) (b)tornadoes (c)lightning, and (d)hail

Cross-section thru supercell - note BWER

54,000 ft topsNW SE

Note: lowest 7,000 ft cannot be seen by radarbecause of the curvature of the earth.

Page 33: Chapter 11: severe weather!! (a)thunderstorms (classification) (b)tornadoes (c)lightning, and (d)hail

Supercell Thunderstorms

• Supercells only form when strong upper-level winds blow, and a significant change in wind direction occurs, generally southeasterly at the surface and WSW in the upper troposphere.

• Wall clouds may be found below the storm’s cloud base -- significant rotation may be seen (tornado spawning area).

Page 34: Chapter 11: severe weather!! (a)thunderstorms (classification) (b)tornadoes (c)lightning, and (d)hail

Thunderstorm evolution and shear

• no shear

• strong shear

Page 35: Chapter 11: severe weather!! (a)thunderstorms (classification) (b)tornadoes (c)lightning, and (d)hail

Supercell formation in a clockwise-turning hodograph

Page 36: Chapter 11: severe weather!! (a)thunderstorms (classification) (b)tornadoes (c)lightning, and (d)hail

thunderstorm classification:a summary