Thunderstorms Flashcards

1
Q

What is required for a thunderstorm to form?

A
  • Instability throughout significant height
  • Moisture
  • Trigger for uplift
  • Limited windshear
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2
Q

What are some of the main risks of a thunderstorm?

A

Icing Turbulence
Hail Lightning
Pressure variation Micro/macro bursts
Water ingestion Tornadoes

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3
Q

What are the 5 types of thunderstorm formation?

A
Heat/Thermal 
Air mass
Frontal 
Squall line
Orographic
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4
Q

How does a heat/thermal thunderstorm form?

A

Absolute Instability occurs due to ELR being much greater than DALR
This creates a large gap of instability, where the storm forms

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5
Q

How does an Air mass thunderstorm form?

A

A cold air mass moving over a warm surface, results in the warm air being underneath the cold air
This creates a deep layer of instability, due to the very steep ELR - resulting in a storm developing (alike to Thermal thunderstorms)

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6
Q

How does a frontal thunderstorm form?

A

The bottom/front of a cold front rolls underneath itself (due to friction), trapping a pocket of warm air beneath it.
This warm air then rising through the cold air, great ELR, therefore instability and a storm grows.

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7
Q

How does a Squall line thunderstorm form?

A

Squalls occur just ahead of a cold front, and can several hundred miles long.
Common over large continent areas (such as North America)

They are essentially many frontal thunderstorms together

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8
Q

How does an Orographic thunderstorm form?

A

When conditionally unstable air is lifted at a ridge/coast

Warm air is pushed up within cold air - creating instability, therefore forming a storm.

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9
Q

What are the 3 stages of thunderstorm development?

A

1- Initial/Developing/Cumulus

2 - Mature

3 - Dissipating

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10
Q

What occurs during the developing stage of a thunderstorm?

A

Updraughts of 60kt (30 m/s OR 6000ft/min) within the cloud
Lasts for 15-30 minutes
No precipitation

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11
Q

What occurs during the mature stage of a thunderstorm?

A

Updraughts of 10,000ft/min - and Downdraughts of 2,000ft/min
Heavy showers begun to fall
May last 30 minutes

An Anvil may also develop
There is a static build up, with lightning between -10 and 10°C
May form Micro/Macrobursts

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12
Q

What occurs during the dissipating stage of a thunderstorm?

A

Downdraughts occur across the cloud
Distinct anvil forms, and can spread to become ST/AS
Can feed moisture into nearby systems
Evap. draws latent heat from falling air

Lasts 90-150 mins

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13
Q

What is a Supercell storm?

A

A single very large storm.
Downdraughts occur next to the updraughts - without interfering
Which allows the storm to continue to grow.

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14
Q

What are Mesoscale Convective Clusters, and where do they occur?

A

Groups of cub development, mostly along the Equatorial trough
Can cover an area of 100-1000km, lasting 1-2 days
May develop into Tropical Storms

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15
Q

Why is it difficult to measure the true extent of a storm formation, using radar?

A

Radar only returns from water droplets.
Therefore giving the best reading at the base, and melting/freezing point (0°C) of a cloud

The rest of the cloud gives minimal return.

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16
Q

What is a micro/macroburst? What is the difference between them?

A

A MICROburst is a very intense, narrow Downdraught that often forms from a storm formation (AC, CB, TCU).
They tend to be smaller than 4km, and last less than 5 mins

A MACROburst tends to be larger than 4km, and last longer than 5 mins

A dry downburst may not be visible on radar - but Virga is a sign.

17
Q

What are the dangers of Windshear?

A

Occurring as a result of a microburst - windshear comprises of very fast moving up/downdraughts.

1) Updraught (bouncing off the ground) forces A/C higher (energy gain)
2) Main downdraught forces A/C lower (energy loss)
3) Updraught (bouncing off ground) forces A/C higher (energy gain)

18
Q

What is lightning, and what are the dangers?

A

Electrostatic discharge, that develops down ionised channels (leaders)

A bolt travels at 140,000mph, with a temperature reaching 30,000°C
Which can lead to a supersonic shockwave through the heated air (Thunder)

If struck, can result in:
blindness, airframe damage, instrument error, loss of hearing

19
Q

Where does most hail form?

A

80% of hail forms within the upper Tropopause (45,000ft)

20
Q

What is the order of effectiveness of radar return on different types of precipitation?

A
1 - Wet hail
2 - Rain
3 - Hail
4 - Wet snow
5 - Dry hail
6 - Dry snow