For fans of snowstorms,algerian sex videos thundersnow is the holy grail of winter weather phenomena. And Thursday's blizzard that struck areas from Philadelphia to southern Maine has featured this relatively rare phenomena in unusual abundance.
Numerous lightning strikes were detected in New York, Connecticut, Massachusetts and in other states as intense snow bands with characteristics of thunderstorms -- think of them as winter's version of summertime downpours -- rotated through.
SEE ALSO: Ferocious blizzard smacks New York, but it'll be over sooner than you thinkOn Twitter, #thundersnow has been a trending hashtag, with users sharing videos showing heavy snow accompanied by the long rumbling bass sounds of thunder in the wintertime.
The ingredients for thundersnow are different compared to what cooks up a more common summertime storm. For example, summer storms typically form on warm, humid days, and snowstorms obviously lack such heating at ground level.
But what they lack in heat they make up for in lift, specifically narrow layers of rapidly rising air. Such lifting is typically triggered by dynamics associated with rapidly intensifying storm systems like the one that "bombed out" south of Long Island on Thursday. It's this strong lifting, usually in a narrow layer of air below 25,000 feet, that generates thundersnow.
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.
Snowstorms tend to have flat, layered clouds, with most of the precipitation formed in the so-called snow growth layer at relatively low levels of the atmosphere.
For thundersnow to occur, the right ingredients need to come together to lift some of these flatter clouds and mold them into protrusions that some meteorologists call turrets.
Such turrets protrude like a fist above the the broad and flat layers of snow-producing clouds, driven to greater heights by lifting from approaching weather features. These weather systems may be a deep dip in the mid-level jet stream, known as a trough, that causes air to rise ahead of it, or ascent from the formation of frontal zones within storm systems, known by the fancy term "frontogenesis."
Lightning centered on Connecticut = thundersnow from rapidly intensifying storm.
— Ryan Maue (@RyanMaue) February 9, 2017
Last 6 hours of strikes: pic.twitter.com/xqMqQ7qqLA
Just some maps of rapidly intensifying snow storm ... excitement of blizzards & thundersnow may inspire a kid to be an atmospheric scientist pic.twitter.com/vPjugEPyIG
— Ryan Maue (@RyanMaue) February 9, 2017
When the right conditions are present, these turrets can form what's known as elevated convection (elevated because the cloud is not based near the Earth's surface). Within these clouds, large snowflakes mix with icy pellets known as graupel, and electrical charges can build up from static electricity as these particles collide in the turbulent atmosphere. This static electricity buildup eventually can trigger occasional cloud-to-cloud or cloud-to-ground lightning strikes.
Areas of thundersnow are typically associated with extremely heavy snowfall rates because the extra lift in such snowbands enhances the production of snowflakes. So, for weather enthusiasts, they have the dual benefit of having lightning and thunder and also leading to a higher snow total. That's a win-win-win.
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.
I was asked this morning if thunder snow is as dangerous as summer-time thunder. Yup...here's the proof. https://t.co/HLMw1lAY5a
— TJ Del Santo ⚡ (@tjdelsanto) February 9, 2017
Interestingly, because thundersnow occurs as a result of elevated convection, the thunder typically sounds different than the rumbles from an average summertime thunderstorm. Thundersnow tends to be somewhat muffled, influenced by its altitude, the cold air the sound waves are traveling through and the snow on the ground.
If you were flying through thundersnow, it forms in the type of cloud that would jolt you to the seat and then let you go like a roller coaster once you reach the edge of it.
All of this combines to make thundersnow a truly special and rare weather event.
The Drake/Meek Mill beef appears to have endedIn just four days, hot temperatures melted all the snow off a glacierAmazing astronaut photos show hurricanes swirling in the AtlanticDonald Glover delivers moving tribute to Mac Miller, says he was the 'sweetest guy'Two men fall off a cliff playing 'Pokémon Go'Springy pup leaping through the grass is the embodiment of joyElon Musk's very serious Boring Company uses Xbox controllersThe women of 'Ozark' redefine the maleTwitter throttled in Turkey amid attempted coupHow much you can get for your iPhone X, 8, and 8 Plus'Shadow of the Tomb Raider' a fiery finish for Croft's origin: ReviewSarah Jessica Parker agrees 'Sex and the City' was 'tone deaf' on diversityTwo men fall off a cliff playing 'Pokémon Go'Norm Macdonald wants us to feel bad for Louis C.K and Roseanne BarrTwo men fall off a cliff playing 'Pokémon Go'What's with people in Netflix original movies wearing shoes IN BED?Kit Harington wants better queer representation from Marvel, bless him‘Life Itself’ will get people talking, and not in a good way: ReviewIn defense of Chili's, Mike Pence's preferred NYC culinary destinationMaisie Williams shares the moment she knew just how big 'Game of Thrones' actually was Having Trouble Sleeping? Read This. Watch: Tao Lin Recalls Writing His First Story Collection An Indulgence of Authors’ Self Nude Bookplates: Should They Exist? Katori Hall on Hoodoo Love by Dan Piepenbring Why “Peblum” Is a Decidedly Different Take on the Toga Epic Watch: Donald Antrim Remembers Writing His First Novel The Affections of the Cheese Guy Win Free Tickets: Nathaniel Mackey and Cathy Park Hong Whiting Awards 2016: Ocean Vuong, Poetry “The Throwback Special” Is “2016’s First Great Book” Louder than Bombs: An Interview with Joachim Trier and Jesse Eisenberg Paris Match: A Puzzle by Dylan Hicks An Excerpt from Blutch’s “Peplum,” a Graphic Novel Odd Behavior: A Comics Adaptation of Lydia Davis’s Story The Borges Memorial Library: A Brief Survey of Imaginary Books Finally, All of Shakespeare’s Potions and Potions in One Place Jenny Holzer Projects Poems onto Buildings Staff Picks: Meryl Meisler, Les Blank, and States of Undress Writers Are Always Spies and Voyeurs, Too
3.5881s , 10519.5 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【algerian sex videos】,Prosperous Times Information Network