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Severe Weather. There are many types including:  Lots of rain  Lightning  Hurricanes  Hail  Tornadoes  Cyclones  Blizzards.

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Presentation on theme: "Severe Weather. There are many types including:  Lots of rain  Lightning  Hurricanes  Hail  Tornadoes  Cyclones  Blizzards."— Presentation transcript:

1 Severe Weather

2 There are many types including:  Lots of rain  Lightning  Hurricanes  Hail  Tornadoes  Cyclones  Blizzards

3 Thunderstorm Thunderstorm – brief heavy storm with rain, thunder, lightning, and strong winds Stages: 1. Cumulus stage – warm air rises to form clouds 2. Mature stage – the sever weather occurs 3. Dissipating stage – storm decreases

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5 Lightning Lightning – the discharge of electrical charges  It occurs when ice and water in clouds rub together causes charges to build up The positive charges - at the top of cloud The negative charges - at the bottom of the clouds When too much builds up the electrons travel to the ground  As the electricity heats the air next to it, it expands quickly making thunder

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7 Hurricanes Hurricane – a tropical storm with winds are more than 74mph that spiral in toward the center  Range from category 1 - 5 How it forms:  Warm moist air over ocean rises and forms clouds  Clouds rotate counter clockwise (in north)  A low pressure forms in the center as the hot lighter air rises and pushes cold heavy air out of the way

8 Parts of the hurricane 3 layers of thick cumulonimbus clouds – spiraling upward around the center The eye – the center of the storm  Calm and clear The eyewall – part bordering the eye  Highest winds are here

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12 Internal Hurricane Structure

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16 Dangers of hurricanes Storm surge – rising sea levels with large wave  As air in center rises it pulls ocean water upward – as it travels onto land it creates storm surges Wind damage – determined by speed of wind, how buildings are constructed, etc.

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21 Cyclones Cyclone – an area with low pressure that has winds moving toward the rising air in the center of an are  Occurs in the mid-western US  Also - what hurricanes are called in the Indian ocean

22 Cyclone formation 1. It starts where warm and cold air move parallel but in opposite directions 2. A piece of the cold front moves faster creating a wave 3. The fast moving cold overtakes the warm front and starts to spin

23 http://esminfo.prenhall.com/science/geoanimations/animations/Tornadoes.html

24 http://www.bom.gov.au/lam/Students_Teachers/cycmod.shtml

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26 Tornadoes Tornado – rotating column of fast moving wind that is visible a funnel shape  Occur mostly in late spring and early fall  Winds up to 400mph Formation: 1. Hot dry air moves up and meets with cold air moving down 2. Air starts to spiral 3. It may develop a funnel shape If it does touch – it wanders haphazardly and can rise and touch down again

27 How does the Enhanced Fujita Scale work? EF 0 Gale Tornado: 65-85 miles per hour (mph) Some damage to chimneys. Tree branches broken off. Shallow-rooted trees uprooted. EF 1 Moderate Tornado: 86-110 mph Roof surfaces peeled off. Mobile homes overturned. Moving autos pushed off roads. EF 2 Significant Tornado: 111-135 mph Considerable damage. Roofs torn off frame houses. Large trees snapped or uprooted. Light object projectiles generated. EF 3 Severe Tornado: 136-165 mph Severe damage. Roofs and some walls torn off well-constructed homes. Most trees in forests uprooted. Heavy cars lifted off ground. EF 4 Devastating Tornado: 166-200 mph Well-constructed houses leveled. Structures blown off weak foundations. Cars thrown and large projectiles generated. EF 5 Incredible Tornado: 200+ mph Strong frame houses lifted off foundations and disintegrated. Automobile-sized projectiles fly through the air in excess of 100 mph. Trees debarked.

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32 Blizzards

33 Ice storms

34 Measuring weather in lower atmosphere We measure to try to predict future weather events Thermometers – temperature Psychrometer – humidity Barometer – air pressure Anemometer – wind speed Wind vein – wind direction

35 Rain Gauge

36 Sling Psychrometer

37 Mercury Barometer

38 Anemometer

39 Wind vein and Wind Socks

40 Measuring weather in upper atmosphere Radiosonde – many instruments lifted by balloon Doppler Radar – uses reflected radio waves to determine velocity and location of weather Weather satellites – create images of weather Computers – used for doing the math and store data for comparisons

41 Radiosonde

42 Satellite

43 Doppler Radar

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45 Computer Models

46 Forecasting weather Use weather maps and models to put collected information in a picture  To try to predict but - these are limited and not always accurate Map includes:  Have different symbols and colors to represent specific weather  Have isotherms – line connecting equal temperatures  Have isobars – lines connecting equal pressures

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48 Measuring Wind

49 Cloud Cover

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51 Isotherms

52 Isobars

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55 Issuing weather alerts Watch – when conditions are ideal for sever weather Warning – when weather has been spotted

56 Trying to control the weather Used techniques like cloud seeding  Cloud seeding – process of introducing condensation or freezing nuclei into a cloud to force precipitation Purpose – either increase rain, decrease rain, reduce lightning It did not work Still are working on it to try to improve the process


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