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6 - Elemental Convective Processes

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 March 2013

Robert J. Trapp
Affiliation:
Purdue University, Indiana
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Summary

Synopsis: Upon initiation, deep convective clouds may evolve into precipitating convective storms. The elemental storm processes are updrafts and downdrafts. Their dynamical structure is described in this chapter, as is that of the storm outflow, to which the updrafts and downdrafts are intimately linked. Consideration is then given to storm evolution, in the context of the single- and multicelled storms of lowest hierarchical rank.

Overview of the Convective Storm Spectrum

Once initiated, convective clouds may evolve into deep convective storms that produce precipitation at the ground, gusty surface winds, and sometimes hail, lightning, and tornadoes. The duration, intensity, and types of phenomena attendant to the storm are related largely to the storm morphology or convective mode. Observable structural characteristics can be used to classify storms as:

  1. Discrete, unicellular storms, including supercell storms

  2. Multicellular storms

  3. Mesoscale-convective systems (MCSs)

This classification – which is well supported by weather radar and satellite observations – borrows from the biological sciences, with convective cells regarded as the basic building blocks of convective storms. A convective cell has a definite, yet porous, boundary (visible cloud edge) like a biological cell wall. A convective cell may also divide and split into two cells (a splitting supercell), encounter and merge with other cells to become a larger cell (an MCS), have more than one “nucleus” (a multicell), and decay or grow depending on the availability of “nutrients” such as atmospheric moisture in its environment.

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Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2013

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