Transcript Storms

Storms
By: Laura Dochniak and Jordan
Durst
Types of Storms
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Blizzard
Sandstorm
Hurricane
Ice Storm
Squall
Thunderstorm
Tornado
Typhoon
Blizzards
• A Blizzard is a severe
snowstorm with strong
winds with a minimum
speed of 35miles per
hour, also has either
falling snow or snow on
the ground.
• Blizzards are formed
when a high pressure
system, also known as a
ridge, interacts with a low
pressure system; this
results in the advection of
air from the high pressure
zone into the low
pressure area.
Sandstorms
• A sandstorm is characterized by high
winds which carry great clouds of dust,
usually in an area that has undergone a
long period of drought.
• Also known as
a Dust Storm.
• They are formed
by unidirectional
wind.
Hurricane
• A hurricane is a tropical
cyclone that occurs over
the warmer areas. The
cyclone is accompanied
by thunderstorms and
extremely high winds and
heavy rains that often
causes damage in coastal
areas.
• Hurricanes form and
intensify over oceanic
regions. They require
sea-surface temperatures
of at least 80° and the
influence of the earth’s
rotation to initiate a
spinning circulation.
Ice Storm
• is a winter storm that
has freezing rain causes
a glaze of ice on all
exposed objects. It
happens when a warm
cloud rains above a
layer of colder air.
however it remains in
liquid form. The super
cooled droplets freeze
into ice on impact when
they fall onto a surface.
• They occur when a
layer of warm air is
between two layers of
cold air.
Squall
• A squall is a sudden, sharp increase in
wind speed (18mph - 25mph) that is
usually associated with brief and heavy
precipitation. This usually occurs in a
squall line. It occurs because there is
active weather conditions such as, rain
showers, thunderstorms, or heavy
snow.
Thunderstorms
• A thunderstorm is a
storm that has
lighting and thunder,
strong gusty winds,
heavy rain, and
occasionally hail.
• Sometimes
thunderstorms
produce tornadoes
Tornadoes
• A violent, whirling
storm of small size, it is
usually very
destructive.
• Formed when huge
masses of clouds
moving in different
directions meet. The air
starts to spin in a spiral
and a funnel of twisting
air, low pressure inside
the funnel sucks up
anything it touches.
• It can travel across land
at very high speeds and
its roaring noise is
heard up to 40km away.
Typhoon
• A typhoon is a tropical cyclone that is
similar to a hurricane, except that it
occurs over the western Pacific Ocean
and its shores. Forms when wind blows
over warm waters, it expands and
rises.
Hail Storm
• A Hail Storm is a storm where ice
chunks, differing in size, fall and cause a
lot of damage.
• Hail is most frequently formed in the
interior of continents within the midlatitudes of Earth, with hail generally
confined to higher elevations within the
tropics. Hail formation is preferred during
the summer months in the afternoon and
evening hours of the day. Hailstorms
normally last 3–15 minutes.
Common Storms in North
America
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Thunderstorms
Hailstorms
Tornadoes
Blizzards
How are Thunderstorms Created
• Thunderstorms are created when
cooler air begins to push warmer humid
air upwards. As the warm air continues
to rise rapidly in an unstable
atmosphere, the cloud builds up higher
and higher and begins to spread.
Thunderstorms can quickly develop
when the atmosphere remains unstable
or if it is able to gather additional
energy from surrounding winds.
Work Cited
• http://hubpages.com/hub/Kinds-of-Storms
• http://www.ema.gov.au/www/ema/schools.n
sf/Page/Get_The_FactsSevere_Storms