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Chapter 11 Lightning, Thunder, and Tornadoes About 80 percent of all lightning is cloud-to-cloud lightning, or sheet lightning, which occurs when the voltage gradient within a cloud, or between clouds, overcomes the electrical resistance of the air. The result is a large and powerful spark that partially equalizes the charge separation. Cloud-to-ground lightning occurs when negative charges accumulate in the lower portions of the cloud. Positive charges are attracted to a relatively small area in the ground directly beneath the cloud establishing a large voltage difference between the ground and the cloud base. The positive charge at the surface is a local phenomenon; it arises because the negative charge at the base of the cloud repels electrons on the ground below. Farther away, the surface maintains its normal negative charge relative to the atmosphere. All lightning requires the initial separation of positive and negative charges into different regions of a cloud. Most often the positive charges accumulate in the upper reaches of the cloud, negative charges in lower portions. Small pockets of positive charges may also gather near the cloud base. The actual lightning event is preceded by the rapid and staggered advance of a shaft of negatively charged air,called a stepped leader. When the leader approaches the ground, a spark surges upward from the ground toward the leader (top). When the leader and the spark connect, they create a pathway for the flow of electrons that initiates the first in a sequence of brightly illuminated strokes, or return strokes (bottom). Another leader (the dart leader) forms within about a tenth of a second, and a subsequent stroke emerges from it. This sequence of dart leaders and strokes may repeat itself four or five times. Because the individual strokes occur in such rapid succession, they appear to be a single stroke that flickers and dances about. We call the combination of strokes a lightning flash, the net effect of which is to transfer electrons from the cloud to the ground. Lightning A bizarre type of electrification called ball lightning appears as a round, glowing mass of electrified air, up to the size of a basketball, that seems to roll through the air or along a surface for 15 seconds or so before either dissipating or exploding. St. Elmo’s fire is a rare and peculiar type of electrical event. Ionization in the air, often just before the formation of cloud-to-ground lightning, can cause tall objects such as church steeples to glow as they emit a continuous barrage of sparks producing a blue-green tint to the air, accompanied by a hissing sound. Sprites are very large but short-lived electrical bursts that rise from cloud tops as lightning occurs below that look somewhat like a giant red jellyfish, extending up to 95 km above the clouds, with blue or green tentacles dangling from the reddish blob. Blue jets are upward-moving electrical ejections from the tops of the most active regions of thunderstorms. They shoot upward at about 100 km/sec and attain heights of up to 50 km above the surface. A voltage difference of about 400,000 volts exists between Earth’s surface and the ionosphere setting up the fair weather electric field or the mean electric field. Electricity flows in response to the voltage gradient with cloud-to-ground lightning discharges transfering electrons to the surface, thus maintaining the voltage difference and the resulting electric field. The tremendous increase in temperature during a lightning stroke causes the air to expand explosively and produce the familiar sound of thunder. The decrease in the density of air with height causes sound waves from lightning strokes over 20 km away be to be bent upward. As a result, the lightning seems to occur without thunder and is sometimes called heat lightning. Air mass thunderstorms are the most common and least destructive usually lasting for less than an hour. The cumulus stage begins when unstable air begins to rise and cool adiabatically to form fair weather cumulus clouds. The mature stage begins when precipitation starts to fall dragging air toward the surface as downdrafts form in the areas of intense precipitation. As the cloud yields heavy precipitation, downdrafts occupy an increasing portion of the cloud base, the supply of additional water vapor is cut off, and the storm enters its dissipative stage. Severe thunderstorms have wind speeds exceeding 93 km/hr, have hailstones larger than 1.9 cm in diameter, or spawn tornadoes. They typically appear in groups with individual storms clustered together in mesoscale convective systems (MCSs). MCSs that occur as linear bands are called squall lines. Mesoscale convective complexes (MCCs) appear as oval or roughly circular organized systems containing several thunderstorms and are self-propagating in that their individual cells often create downdrafts, leading to the formation of new, powerful cells nearby. The precipitation from each thunderstorm cell creates its own downdraft, which is enhanced by the cooling of the air as the rain evaporates and consumes latent heat. Upon hitting the ground, the downdrafts spread outward and converge with the warmer surrounding air to form an outflow boundary. The movement of thunderstorm cells in an MCC. Initially (at time t = 0) all the cells are moving toward the northeast. The cells in row A are the oldest, those in E the most recently formed. Later (t = 1), the cells in row A have dissipated, but a new row, F, has formed along the southern margin of the complex. At t = 2, row B has dissipated while a new row, G, has formed. Squall line thunderstorms consist of a large number of individual storm cells arranged in a linear band, about 500 km in length. They tend to form parallel to and about 300 to 500 km ahead of cold fronts. Wind velocities in the direction of storm movement typically increase with height. The strong winds aloft push the updrafts ahead of the downdrafts and allow the rising air to feed additional moisture into the storm. As the downdrafts reach the ground, they surge forward as a wedge of cold, dense air, called a gust front. A supercell storm consists of a single, extremely powerful cell. Despite their single-cell structure, supercell storms are remarkably complex, with the updraft and downdraft bending and wrapping around each other due to strong wind shear. The downdrafts serve to amplify the adjacent updrafts. Doppler radar can reveal a feature of a supercell called a hook, which looks like a small appendage attached to the main body of the storm whose appearance usually means tornado formation is imminent. When displayed on a radar screen a large portion of the storm seems to be missing. This zone, known as a vault, is where the inflow of warm surface air enters the supercell. Potential instability arises when a layer of dry air rests above one that is warm and humid. If the air is potentially unstable, lifting of an entire layer of air can cause its temperature lapse rate to increase, thus making it statically unstable. Strong downdrafts may also create downbursts, potentially deadly gusts of wind that can reach speeds in excess of 270 km/hr. When strong downdrafts reach the surface, they can spread outward in all directions to form intense horizontal winds capable of causing severe damage at the surface. Downbursts with diameters of less than 4 km are called microbursts, and can produce a particularly dangerous problem when they occur near airports. The mean distribution of thunderstorms across the U.S. Tornadoes are zones of extremely rapid, rotating winds beneath the base of cumulonimbus clouds. Though the majority of tornadoes rotate cyclonically a few spin in the opposite direction. Strong tornadic winds result from extraordinarily large differences in atmospheric pressure over short distances. The first observable step in tornado formation is the slow, horizontal rotation (a) of a large segment of the cloud which begins deep within the cloud interior. The resulting large vortices are called mesocyclones. Under the right conditions, strong updrafts cause the horizontal vortex of air to be tilted upward (b). The narrowing column of rotating air stretches downward, and a portion of the cloud base protrudes downward to form a wall cloud. Wall clouds form where cool, humid air from zones of precipitation is drawn into the updraft feeding the main cloud. The cool, humid air condenses at a lower height than does the air feeding into the rest of the cloud. Wall clouds most often occur on the southern or southwestern portions of supercells, near areas of large hail and heavy rainfall. Funnel clouds form when a narrow, rapidly rotating vortex emerges from the base of the wall cloud. A funnel cloud has all the characteristics and intensity of a true tornado; the only difference between the two is that a funnel cloud has yet to touch the ground. No other country in the world has nearly as many as the U.S. The continent covers a wide range of latitudes; its southeastern portion borders the warm Gulf of Mexico, while the northernmost portion extends into the Arctic. Much of the eastern portion of the continent is flat and no major mountain range extends in an east–west direction. These features allow for a collision of maritime tropical air with continental polar air along the polar front. Tornadoes around the globe. The distribution of tornadoes during the year by state. Although most tornadoes rotate around a single, central core, some of the most violent ones have relatively small zones of intense rotations (about 10 m in diameter) called suction vortices. It is these small vortices that probably cause the familiar phenomenon of one home being destroyed while the one next door remains unscathed. The Fujita scale provides a widely used system for ranking tornado intensity. Documented tornadoes fall into seven levels of intensity, with each assigned a particular F-value ranging from 0 to 5. In the U.S., the majority (69 percent) fall into the weak category, which includes F0 and F1 tornadoes. A severe thunderstorm watch means that the situation is conducive to the formation of such activity. If a severe thunderstorm has already developed, a severe thunderstorm warning is issued. Likewise, tornado warnings alert the public to the observation of an actual tornado or the detection of tornado precursors on Doppler radar. Waterspouts occur over warm water bodies and are typically smaller than tornadoes, having diameters between about 5 and 100 m. Though they are generally weaker than tornadoes, they can have wind speeds of up to 150 km/hr. Some waterspouts originate when land-based tornadoes move offshore. The majority are formed over the water itself. The next chapter examines tropical storms and hurricanes.