Severe weather
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Severe weather
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Severe weather is any destructive weather phenomenon. The term is usually used to refer to severe thunderstorms and related phenomena, such as tornadoes, hail, and downbursts.[1][2] Severe weather can also refer to snowstorms, ice storms, blizzards, flooding, hurricanes, and high winds.
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[edit] Severe summer weather
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Severe summer weather can be put into three different categories. These are approaching severe, severe, and significant severe. Approaching severe is defined as hail between 1/2 and 3/4 inch diameter or winds between 50 and 58 M.P.H. (50 knots). In the United States, such storms will usually warrant a Significant Weather Advisory. Severe is defined as hail 3/4 inch (one inch in some places) diameter or larger, winds 58 M.P.H. or stronger, or a tornado.[3] Significant severe is defined as hail 2 inch in diameter or larger, winds 75 M.P.H. (65 knots) or stronger, or a tornado of strength EF2 or stronger. Both severe and significant severe events will warrant a severe thunderstorm warning from the National Weather Service or Environment Canada if the event is in the United States or Canada, respectively. If a tornado is occurring or if it is likely one will occur, the severe thunderstorm warning will be superseded by a tornado warning, which warns for other elements of a severe thunderstorm as well as the tornado itself.
[edit] Development
Organized severe weather tends to occur in the same conditions which cause ordinary thunderstorms: atmospheric moisture, lift, and instability.[4] Clouds are little more than condensed water vapor, and thus high atmospheric moisture, signified by a high dew point, aids the development of the clouds which become thunderstorms. Instability is defined the tendency for a parcel of air near the Earth's surface to keep rising when forced upwards by a source of lift. When sufficient air starts to rise due to this instability, this air also cools and expands, and the moisture contained in the parcel condenses creating the cloud itself. Sources of lift include geographic features, such as mountains, and air mass boundaries such as cold fronts, warm fronts, and dry lines.
A wide variety of conditions can cause severe weather. While in general, the criteria above will produce generic thunderstorms, any of several factors can turn those thunderstorms severe; for instance, a pool of cold air aloft can aid in the development of large hail from seemingly innoccuous thunderstorms. However, the most severe hail and tornadoes are produced by supercell thunderstorms, and the worst downbursts and derechos (straight-line winds) are produced by bow echoes. Both of these types of storms tend to form in environments high in wind shear.[4]
[edit] Hazards
By definition, all types of severe weather pose some risk to life and property.
[edit] Outbreaks
A severe weather outbreak is typically considered to be 10 or more tornadoes, some of which will most likely be long tracked and violent, and many large hail and damaging wind reports. However, there is much dependence on the geographic size of the outbreak (does it cover a small section of a state or is it spread out over several states?).[5]
[edit] References
- ^ AMS Glossary
- ^ AMS Glossary
- ^ http://www.crh.noaa.gov/dvn/?n=oneinchhail
- ^ a b Storm Prediction Center Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ)
- ^ E-mail from Storm Prediction Center forecaster Jared Guyer
[edit] See also
- Convective storm detection
- Convective indices :
- Robert C. Miller, a pioneer in the field

