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Did you know… • Weather Related Deaths in the U.S. (1940-1991) – Hurricanes= 9% – Tornadoes=26% – Floods= 27% – Lightning= 38% • **How did Benjamin Franklin feel when he discovered electricity? • ...shocked • Intro Storms: http://library.thinkquest.org/5818/ (esp. look at safety) • On website, look at Hurricanes and Tornadoes Storm Project • Introduce STORM project-- pick a storm, then divide up the jobs: • (final product will be a trifold poster—use software such as Excel, Word, Publisher) • Choices: (tornadoes, hurricanes, severe T-storms (lightning, winds, hail), or blizzards--include lake effect snow) • You can work by yourself: "floods and droughts" • ***Be sure all work is in student's own words!!** • Keep a formal BIBLIOGRAPHY • excellent pictures • 1 graph of REAL data about your type of storm • safety precautions, including what to do for a watch and warning • write an "almost true" news story about your type of storm • causes and effects other interesting facts • where are most found (or where they occur the most) in the world (if it’s U.S., which states) • rating of severity (like SS scale is....) • list of 5 worst historic storms (same type)—what was the property damage, deaths, injuries, etc.? • include where/when it occurred, strength/intensity, damage/injuries/deaths, etc. Criteria for Blizzards: Make sure you have this down! (must continue for 3 hours) • freezing temperatures and strong winds (gusting over 30mph) so wind chills -15°F or less • heavy snowfall Ex: Blizzard of 1993 “Storm of the Century” • March 11-15 • 60 inches of snow in one location in TN (Marietta got 8”) • 45mph winds in Norcross • lowest pressure= 960 mB (28.35”Hg) • about $10 billion in damage • 300 deaths • 11 tornadoes in FL Did you know… • one bolt of energy contains enough energy to toast 160,000 pieces of bread. • every second around 100 lightning bolts strike the Earth. • every year lightning kills 1000 people. • lightning can heat air to 33,000°C. • Intro Storms: http://library.thinkquest.org/5818/ (esp. look at safety) • On website, look at Thunderstorms and Blizzards Thunderstorms • • • strong winds, heavy rain, lightning (static electricity), and thunder (the sound) 5:1 ratio for example: if you see lightning, then hear the thunder 10 seconds later, how far away is the storm? • lightning kills more people in U.S. than tornadoes or hurricanes (Copy this one) • can occur along fast moving cold fronts in CB clouds (and this one) Thunderstorms: Make sure you have this • Caused by: • mountain uplift • warm air rising in summer • cold frontal passage Severe T-storms • thunderstorm safety (Make sure you have • severe thunderstorms this) (has one or more of – don’t be (or be the following) near) tallest object – stay away from – high winds water and metals – tornadoes (conducts electricity) – hail (damage crops, dent cars, break windows) – flash floods Flooding—variety of causes 2009 (Sept 21-23) Atlanta Flood Mableton Subdivision (Kennesaw) • What is a tornado’s favorite game? • .....Twister Tornadoes – happen in only 1% of all t-storms – start as a funnel cloud that drops out of a CB cloud – must touch the ground (waterspout if touches water) – SMALL: most about 10-60 meters wide Most (75%) tornadoes hit the U.S. Tornado Alley (Make sure you have this) most happen in spring and early summer (April for Atlanta) What caused this?? More about tornadoes: – most last only a few minutes – winds speeds usually 120-180 km/hr (some up to 500 km/hr) – most deaths/injuries from flying debris* – watch vs warning – Fujita Scale for tornado intensity (F0-F5) Hurricane (note the size!)—the most powerful storm on earth • What did the hurricane say to the other hurricane?....... • I have my EYE on you. • DYK… • the energy in one hurricane is equal to about 500,000 atomic bombs? Hurricane facts: • • • • • wind speeds of AT LEAST 120 km/hr (74mph)—some reach up to 300 km/hr (begins as a tropical depression, then tropical storm) most powerful storms on Earth called typhoons in western Pacific and cyclones in Indian Ocean most form 5-20° latitude over WARM, tropical oceans (energy comes from condensation of water vapor) (MAKE SURE YOU HAVE THIS!) BIG: 160-1,500 km in diameter MORE Hurricane Facts • • • • • • • can last for days can travel for thousands of kilometers eye=calm center most deaths/injuries (90%) from water (heavy rain and storm surge 1-8 m high) aircraft fly into the hurricanes satellites follow the hurricanes Saffir-Simpson for hurricane intensity (SS1-SS5) Why are these flamingos in the restroom (hint: Miami Zoo) Hurricane Dennis • View from space (website of Dennis) Parts of a hurricane • Hurricanes are fueled by the evaporation of warm water, so they fall apart when they hit land and/or cold water (MAKE SURE YOU HAVE THIS) Storm surge Before and After • Saffir-Simpson (animated website) How are hurricanes named? • Look at names for 2010 hurricanes/tropical storms. (website) • Rules: – alphabetical, male/female (can be international) – name tropical storms and hurricanes – do not use Q, U, X, Y, and Z – deadly/devastating hurricanes--names have been "retired“ (ex: Katrina, Andrew, etc.) • As a group, make up names for 2016 (graduation!)-discuss categories too Hurricane Simulation • Hurricane tracking???: http://ww2010.atmos.uiuc.edu/(Gh)/gui des/mtr/hurr/hurtrack/index.html • BEGIN Weather Eye (become the Mayor of a coastal city) 10 worst hurricanes in U.S. • 1. The Great Labor Day Storm(1935) - Florida 2. Hurricane Katrina(2005) - Louisiana & Mississippi 3. Hurricane Camille(1969) - Mississippi, SE Louisiana 4.Hurricane Andrew(1992) - Florida and Louisiana 5. Unnamed Hurricane(1886) - Texas 6. The Atlantic-Gulf Hurricane(1919) - Florida, Texas 7. San Felipe-Okeechobee Hurricane(1928) - FL 8. Hurricane Donna(1960) - Florida to New England 9. Unnamed Storm(1915) - New Orleans, Louisiana 10. Hurricane Carla(1961) - Texas Compare/Contrast Hurricanes and Tornadoes • • • • • • • • • both can move fast (slows down over land) both occur in summer neither can be stopped, but precautions available both have strong, swirling winds both have scales of intensity both natural disasters (dangerous storms) both destructive and can be deadly both involve water and cumulonimbus clouds both LOW pressure (cyclones) • both spin counter clockwise Differences • HURRICANE • larger (200-300 miles in diameter) • forms over warm water (80+ degrees) • June-Nov (Sept) • flood/water damage • lasts 7-10 days • Saffir-Simpson Scale (1-5) • TORNADO • smaller (30 ft- 1.5 miles wide) • forms over land (otherwise a waterspout) • • • • April-June wind damage lasts 10-20 minutes Fujita-Pearson Scale (0-6) Questions • What properties of air near the ground are likely to produce a thunderstorm? (think of type of pressure and humidity) • Moist, low pressure • Which combination of properties describe cold air? (think of density and pressure) • High density and high pressure • What is the source of a hurricane’s energy? a. warm, moist air evaporating from the sea b. cool, moist air evaporating from the sea c. warm, dry air evaporating from the sea d. warm, moist air condensing from the sea • What happens when moist air rises high into the sky? • it cools and condenses • Where are tropical storms born? – a. – b. – c. – d. over water near Earth’s poles over land near Earth’s poles over water near the equator over land near the equator • Return to : http://library.thinkquest.org/5818/ (esp. look at safety) • On website, look at Floods and Drought • The eye of a hurricane has very _______ pressure and ________ winds. • low, no/calm • If a hurricane travels at an average speed of 30 km/hr, how long will it take to cross 2,100 km of ocean? about _______days • 2100km x 1/30 x 1/24 = about 3 days