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A rolling thundercloud over Enschede, The Netherlands.

A thunderstorm is a form of severe weather characterized by the presence of lightning and its attendant thunder. It is often accompanied by copious rainfall, or, on occasion, snowfall.

Thunderstorms form when significant condensation, resulting in the production of a wide range of water droplets and ice crystals, occurs in an atmosphere that is unstable and supports deep, rapid upward motion. This often occurs in the presence of three conditions: sufficient moisture accumulated in the lower atmosphere, reflected by high dewpoint temperatures; a significant fall in air temperature with increasing height, known as a steep lapse rate; and a force such as mechanical convergence along a cold front that will focus the lift.

Thunderstorms have had a lasting and powerful influence on mankind. Romans thought them to be battles waged by Jupiter, who hurled lightning bolts forged by Vulcan. Thunderstorms were associated with the Thunderbird, held by Native Americans to be a servant of the Great Spirit . In more contemporary times, thunderstorms now have taken on the role of a curiosity. Every spring, storm chasers head to the Great PlainsThe Great Plains or High Plains are the elevated plains which lie east of the Rocky Mountains in the United States of America and Canada, covering the states of New Mexico, Texas, Oklahoma, Colorado, Kansas, Nebraska, Wyoming, Montana, South Dakota and No to explore the visual and scientific aspects of storms and tornadoes.

1 Life cycle

A given cell of a thunderstorm goes through three stages: the cumulus stage, the mature stage, and the dissipation stage. This life cycle was identified in 1949 as the result of the U.S. Weather Bureau's landmark Thunderstorm Project.

In the cumulus stage of a thunderstorm cell, masses of moisture are pushed upwards; the moisture rapidly cools into liquid drops of water vapor, which appears as cumulus cloudThis article is about clouds in meteorology. For the musical concept of clouds, see Cloud (music). For the Final Fantasy VII character, see Cloud Strife. A cloud is a visible mass of condensed water droplets or ice crystals suspended in the atmosphere abos. Not only are the masses of water vaporWater vapor (US English) or water vapour is water in gaseous form. It arises either through evaporation of liquid water or sublimation from solid ice. By the reverse processes of condensation and deposition, vapor converts to water or ice. Above 100 ° C ( warmer than the surrounding air, but water vapor is less dense than dry air, and for both of these reasons the warm humid air will tend to rise in an updraft due to the process of convectionFluid dynamics Convection is the transfer of heat by the motion of or within a fluid. It may arise from temperature differences either within the fluid or between the fluid and its boundary, or from the application of an external motive force. It is one o. This creates a low-pressure zone beneath the forming thunderstorm. In a typical thunderstorm, some 5×108Scientific notation standard index notation is floating-point notation with radix (base) 10. It is a concise way of recording numbers using integer powers of ten, that is used to record numbers which are notably large or small. Nonzero numbers are written kg of water vapor are lifted and the amount of energyThis article is about the scientific concept. Energy use by humans is discussed in other articles''. Energy generally and qualitatively speaking, is the property (or the quantity of the property) of doing things or supplying power. The expressions energy released when this condenses is about equal to the energy used by a cityA city is an urban area, differentiated from a town, village, or hamlet by size, population density, importance, or legal status. City can also be a synonym for " downtown. Introduction A city usually consists of residential, industrial and business areas ( US- 2002) of 100,000 over a month.

In the mature stage, the accumulated water vapor has become large, with the top layer often spreading out into an anvil formation. The resulting cloud is called cumulonimbus. The water vapor will coalesce into heavy droplets and ice particles, which will fall onto the area below as rain. If temperatures in the upper atmosphere are cold enough, some of these droplets may actually form into masses of ice and fall as hail. While updrafts are still present, the falling rain creates downdrafts as well. The presence of both updrafts and downdrafts during this stage can cause considerable internal turbulence in the storm system, which sometimes manifests as strong winds, severe lightning, and even tornadoes.

Finally, in the dissipation stage, updraft conditions no longer exist, and the storm is characterized largely by weak downdrafts. Because most of the moisture has precipitated out as rain or ice (precipitation) there is no longer sufficient moisture in the lower air to sustain the cycle.



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