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Chapter 8 Weather Robert W. Christopherson Charlie Thomsen Weather Forecasting Figure 8.17 Violent Weather Thunderstorms Tornadoes Tropical Cyclones Thunderstorms: cumulonimbus clouds create heavy precipitation, lightning, thunders, hail, wind and tornadoes Florida has the highest frequency of T-storms Figure 8.19 Thunderstorms Figure 8.20 Lightning: flashes of light caused by enormous electrical discharges (10-100 millions of volts, super heat the air to 1500030000ºC) Thunder: violent expansion of air sends shock waves through atmosphere Lightning hazards: people, animals. Trees, and structures. About 200 death and thousands of injuries in US and Canada Hailstones Figure 8.21 Mesocyclone and Tornado Figure 8.22 Tornado: funnel clouds touch the earth’s surface; a few meter to 100m in size; Its intensity is measured by Fujita scale Figure 8.22 Tornado Figure 8.22 Super Cell Tornado and Eye Wall Figure 8.23 Tornado Path Figure 8.22 Tornadoes: spatial and temporal distribution Tornado Alley: Texas, Oklahoma, Kansas. Peak season: May and June in United States Figure 8.24 Tropical storms start in easterly waves. Easterly Waves: waves move from east to west, thunderstorms occur over the east side of the trough Figure 8.25 Tropical Cyclones Figure 8.26 Hurricanes Gilbert and Catarina Hurricane: tropical cyclone when its maximum wind speed exceed 65 knots (119kph, 74mph) Figure 8.26 Profile of a Hurricane Eyewall: vertical rising air, thick clouds, strong wind Eye in the center (clear sky, calm) Figure 8.27 Hurricane Isabel, Cape Hatteras and the Outer Banks Figure 8.28 2005: Record-Breaking Storm Season Hurricane season is during later summer and early fall Requirements: warm surface water temperature, 5º away from equator Figure FS 8.1.1