Drones To Study Hurricanes

NASA will begin flying drones into hurricanes in order to study their structure and the environment in which they form.

How To Track Severe Weather: The SPC

A primer on how to use the Storm Prediction Center's website to keep track of severe weather.

What is a derecho?

A post explaining the dangerous (and common) type of convection called a "derecho."

Remembering April 27, 2011

A discussion about the worst tornado outbreak in recorded American history.

Explaining Heat Bursts

Explaining the relatively uncommon phenomenon known as "heat bursts."

Thursday, June 21, 2012

June 21 2012 Virginia Outflow Boundary

Numerous and isolated single-cell thunderstorms are developing across parts of the Mid Atlantic this afternoon, and one of the storms in the mountains of southwestern Virginia just sent off a pretty nice outflow boundary. The storm near Hillsville, VA had a lifespan of about an hour and dissipated as quickly as it formed. The 3D radar image shows how the collapse of the storm's updraft, and subsequent collapse of the storm's elevated heavy precipitation, led to the development and propagation of the outflow boundary away from the storm towards the east. Click the image to enlarge.

An outflow boundary is a storm's "cold pool," or a pool of cold air that forms at the base of the storm due to rain-cooled air descending through the storm and piling up at the surface. As storms collapse, this cold pool radiates outward from the storm as a gust of wind followed by a marked downward spike in temperatures.

These outflow boundaries often serve as a focus for new storm development, and are a crucial component to the formation and sustenance of mesoscale convective systems (organized complexes of thunderstorms, usually in the form of a squall line).

Outflow boundaries can also create cool clouds known as "shelf clouds." As the cold air pushes out into the warmer, more unstable air, it acts as a mini front by lifting the warmer, unstable air up and over the cold pool, allowing it to condense and form a cloud that takes on the shape of a shelf. Below are two examples of a shelf cloud, both taken by me in May 2011 and June 2012, respectively.



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