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Cyclones and Anticyclones September 19, 2007. Name that cloud.

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Cyclones and Anticyclones September 19, 2007
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Page 1: Cyclones and Anticyclones September 19, 2007. Name that cloud.

Cyclones and Anticyclones

September 19, 2007

Page 2: Cyclones and Anticyclones September 19, 2007. Name that cloud.

Name that cloud

Page 3: Cyclones and Anticyclones September 19, 2007. Name that cloud.

Atmospheric Pressure Systems

High-pressure system-also called anticyclone-circulating body of air-descending air-clockwise circulation innorthern hemisphere

Page 4: Cyclones and Anticyclones September 19, 2007. Name that cloud.
Page 5: Cyclones and Anticyclones September 19, 2007. Name that cloud.

• Low-pressure system

• -also called cyclone

• -circulating body of air

• -rising air

• -counterclockwise circ.

• in northern hemisphere

Page 6: Cyclones and Anticyclones September 19, 2007. Name that cloud.
Page 7: Cyclones and Anticyclones September 19, 2007. Name that cloud.

Semi-Permanent Pressure Cells

Page 8: Cyclones and Anticyclones September 19, 2007. Name that cloud.

Thunderstorms

• A typical thunderstorm lasts a few hours

Page 9: Cyclones and Anticyclones September 19, 2007. Name that cloud.

Severe Thunderstorms• Can be single-cell or multi-cell storms

• Anticyclonic and cyclonic circulation within the cell - supercell

• Updrafts into the storm can reach 170mi/hr

• As supercells move, the anticyclonic an cyclonic circulation can separate creating 2 supercells

• This is how squall lines and mesoscale convective complexes (MCCs) are created

Page 10: Cyclones and Anticyclones September 19, 2007. Name that cloud.

Supercell Thunderstoms

• Can last 12 hours

• Squall lines and MCCs can last longer

• Most common during afternoon and early evening

• The sun heats the ground and that heat rises to the lower atmosphere

• This intensifies the contrast between air temperatures on either side of the coming cold front

Page 11: Cyclones and Anticyclones September 19, 2007. Name that cloud.

Super-cell

Page 12: Cyclones and Anticyclones September 19, 2007. Name that cloud.

Supercell

Page 13: Cyclones and Anticyclones September 19, 2007. Name that cloud.

Supercell

Page 14: Cyclones and Anticyclones September 19, 2007. Name that cloud.

Hail• In a supercell, powerful updrafts carry

water droplets to great altitude• The cold high-altitude air freezes the water• The frozen water then serves as a

condensation nuclei for other water droplets forming hail

• Hail is cycled through the cloud growing larger

• It falls to the ground when it is heavier than the force of the updraft

Page 15: Cyclones and Anticyclones September 19, 2007. Name that cloud.

Hail

• Can be pea to baseball sized

• Occur most often between April and September

• Peak between June and July

• Can occur in late fall and early spring, but usually very small

Page 16: Cyclones and Anticyclones September 19, 2007. Name that cloud.

Thunderstorm Wind

• Straight-line (nontornadic) winds called derechos – very powerful and damaging

• Gust front – rush of cool air derechos moving ahead of the storm – can increase by 60mi/hr in seconds

• As rain begins, wind speed decreases

• Microbursts also common

Page 17: Cyclones and Anticyclones September 19, 2007. Name that cloud.

Lightning

• Most dangerous aspect of a thunderstorm for human life

• More dangerous than tornadoes

• The Troposphere and Ionosphere are excellent conductors of electric current in the atmosphere

• Between them is the Stratosphere, which is a terrible conductor of electric current

Page 18: Cyclones and Anticyclones September 19, 2007. Name that cloud.

Lightning

• When a poor conductor is between two good conductors, a capacitor is created

• A capacitor has the ability to store electrostatic charge

• The earth-ionosophere capacitor is 8000 mi in diameter and surrounds the Earth

• Vertical air currents and areas of high water vapor content produce channels of high conductivity

Page 19: Cyclones and Anticyclones September 19, 2007. Name that cloud.

Lightning

• Cumulonimbus clouds that reach the Tropopause present a path for electrical discharge

• Discharge can occur slowly or very quickly, as lightning strokes

• Our atmosphere is constantly dissipating 450 megawatts of power


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