Transcript Do Now
AIM: Types of severe storms
Do Now: In your notes answer the following
question.
1) Which pressure system do you think is the
cause for severe weather?
I. Severe Storms
• caused by intense low pressure
- rotate Counterclockwise
- pull air in towards the center.
A. Thunderstorms
- caused by moist, warm
air rising quickly (cold
front).
Cumulonimbus clouds
(takes on an anvil
shape)
1) Nor'easters are
massive cyclones that
make land fall in the
North East due to
winds blowing from
the NE.
2) Thunder and Lightning
- Friction between raindrops and the cloud
builds an electric charge causing lightning.
- lightning causes the air to expand and then
collapse back on itself creating thunder clap.
B. Tornadoes (Spring Early Summer)
1. Most powerful storms on Earth.
- violently rotating columns of air (vortex)
- in contact with both a cumulonimbus cloud and the
surface of the earth.
- they occur when a
cold air mass meets
a warm air mass.
Winds can exceed
300 mph!
The mid-west region where
tornados occur in great numbers
is called “Tornado Alley”.
2. Strength is measured
with the fujita scale,
which measures wind
speeds and destruction.
II. El Nino
Conditions:
• seasonal shift in
global weather
patterns (about every
5 years)
• causes changes in
precipitation, winds
and sea levels along
pacific coasts.
III. Monsoons
- In winter, the water is
warmer than the land causing
• Large seasonal
a land-breeze to occur,
changes in winds due pushing storms out into the
to the differences in ocean creating period of
specific heat of land drought.
and water.
• Mostly seen in the
Indian Ocean.
- Summer temperatures
cause the land to heat up
faster than the water causing
a sea-breeze to occur,
pushing storms onto the land
creating floods.
B. Hurricanes (late summer early fall)
1) Begin as tropical storms and gain energy from
warm water (Gulf of Mexico and Caribbean
sea.
- Energy is lost moving over land or cool water.
2) Tropical storms travel west along the equator.
- Their rotation carries them Northward.
- At 300N, they are influenced by the
westerlies (travel up the U.S. east coast)
3) Small area of sinking air in the center called the
eye. This marks the half way point of the hurricane.
4) Hurricanes are categorized based on
their wind speed. At 76 mph a tropical storm
is now called a hurricane.
5) Storm Surge is caused as strong winds
pile water up against the coast, causing
flooding.