Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Weather SCOTT HANDEL National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration Photo: Courtesy NOAA.

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "Weather SCOTT HANDEL National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration Photo: Courtesy NOAA."— Presentation transcript:

1

2 Weather SCOTT HANDEL National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration Photo: Courtesy NOAA

3 Outline Thunderstorms Hail/Lightning Tornadoes Tsunamis Hurricanes (Time Permitting)

4 Thunderstorm Formation

5 Lightning

6 How Lightning Forms The connection is made and the protons rush up to meet the electrons. It is at that point that we see lightning and hear thunder. A bolt of lightning heats the air along its path causing it to expand rapidly. Thunder is the sound caused by rapidly expanding air.

7 http://www.archive.org/details/Dupa5gdr-BelizeCrawlerLightningStorm697-3

8 Hail

9 How does Hail Form? Strong updrafts of warm air and down- drafts of cold air are in a thunderstorm. If a water droplet is picked up by the updrafts...it can be carried well above the freezing level. With temperatures below 32°F...our water droplet freezes. As the frozen droplet begins to fall...carried by cold downdrafts...it may thaw as it moves into warmer air toward the bottom of the thunderstorm But...it may also get picked up again by another updraft...carrying it back into very cold air and re-freezing it. With each trip above and below the freezing level our frozen droplet adds another layer of ice. Finally...our frozen water droplet...with many layers of ice - much like the rings in a tree...falls to the ground - as hail!

10 What can hail do?

11 http://www.archive.org/details/PerthHailstorm

12 Tornadoes What is a tornado? "a violently rotating column of air, pendant from a cumuliform cloud or underneath a cumuliform cloud, and often (but not always) visible as a funnel cloud."

13 HOW DO TORNADOES FORM?

14 WHERE DO TORNADOES FORM?

15 WHY DO TORNADOES LIKE THE CENTRAL U.S.? WHY DO TORNADOES LIKE THE CENTRAL U.S.?

16 Fujita Tornado Damage Scale Scale Wind Estimate (MPH) Typical Damage F0 < 73 Light – Some damage to chimneys, branches broken, signs damaged. F173-112 Moderate – Peels surface off roofs; mobile homes pushed off foundations or overturned. F2113-157 Considerable – Roofs torn off frame houses, mobile homes demolished, large trees snapped F3158-206 Severe – Roofs and some walls torn off well constructed homes, trains overturned F4207-260 Devastating – Well-constructed homes leveled; cars thrown and large missiles generated F5261-318 Incredible – Strong frame houses leveled off foundation and swept away, trees debarked

17 F0 Damage

18 F1 Damage

19 F2 Damage

20 F3 Damage

21 F4 Damage

22 F5 Damage

23 Tornado Embeds

24

25

26 Rate the Tornado

27 F2

28 Rate the Tornado

29 F4

30 Rate the Tornado

31 F1

32 Rate the Tornado

33 F2

34 Rate the Tornado

35 F4

36 Rate the Tornado

37 F3

38 Rate the Tornado

39 F5

40 Rate the Tornado

41 F2

42 Rate the Tornado

43 F2

44 http://www.archive.org/details/tornadafootageilp

45 http://www.archive.org/details/AH-Tsunamis_-_Know_What_to_Do

46 http://www.archive.org/details/tsunami_koh_lanta_thailand

47 http://www.archive.org/details/Tsunami_399

48 http://www.archive.org/details/tsunami_penang_beach

49 HURRICANES! …An overview of tropical cyclones Princeton University Quest Science Workshop July, 2007

50 Why are the winds so strong in a hurricane? Winds always move from areas of higher pressure to areas of lower pressure. The bigger the difference between the high and low pressure, the stronger the winds. HL The winds from Hurricane Fabian battering Bermuda on September 5, 2003.

51 What causes the winds to rotate around a hurricane? Hurricane Isabel making landfall on September 18, 2003 H HH H L The Coriolis Effect: A change in the direction of moving objects due to those objects moving on a rotating, spherical planet.

52 The hurricane heat engine: how it works 3. Having lost most of its heat and energy, the air is now expelled outward away from the center of the storm in the cooler hurricane outflow at high levels. In mature hurricanes, an eye forms in the center. Here, the air is descending and the region is generally cloud-free. 2. The warm, moist air rises in thunderstorms surrounding the eye, supplying the fuel that helps strengthen the storm and intensify the winds. 1. As air rushes into the hurricane’s low pressure center, the air picks up heat and moisture (fuel) from the warm ocean surface. H H L

53 - Atlantic and Eastern Pacific Oceans (hurricanes) - Western North Pacific Ocean (typhoons) - South Pacific and Indian Oceans (cyclones) Where do tropical cyclones form? (10) (26) (14) (15) (5) (9) (nn) Number of storms per year

54 Saffir Simpson Scale

55 Wind Damage examples A 1x4 board of wood was pierced through a palm tree by Hurricane Andrew’s winds in August, 1992. A mobile home park near Miami, FL was completely destroyed by Hurricane Andrew in August, 1992. An historic home along the Gulf Coast before and after the passage of Category 5 Hurricane Camille in August, 1969.

56 Storm Surge

57

58

59

60

61

62


Download ppt "Weather SCOTT HANDEL National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration Photo: Courtesy NOAA."

Similar presentations


Ads by Google