Home
About Melbourne
Climate of Melbourne
Webcams in Melbourne
Message Board!!
Satellite Images
Weather Explained
Clouds Explained
Thunderstorms
Weather Links
Other Links
Currency Converter
World Weather Map
Sydney
New Zealand
Auckland
Indonesia
Bali
Bangkok
Phuket
Beijing
Kyoto
Laos
Malaysia
Russia
Moscow
St.Petersburg
Istanbul
Bodrum
Alanya
Israel
Jerusalem
New Delhi
Mumbai
Goa
Sri Lanka
Bangladesh
World Weather Web
Important!
Legal information
Advertise Here
Contact us
Site index
|
Back to the Thunderstorms Index Page
Thunderstorm form cycle
Most thunderstorms form by a special cycle. This cycle has three stages: the Cumulus Stage, Mature Thunderstorm Stage,
and Dissipating Stage. See here below to learn more about how each cycle works.
Cumulus Stage
The sun heats the earth's surface during the day. The heat on the surface and warms the air around it. Since warm air is lighter than cool air, it starts to rise (known as an updraft). If the air is moist, then the warm air condenses into a cumulus cloud. The cloud will continue to grow as long as warm air below it continues to rise.
|
|
Mature Thunderstrom Stage
When the cumulus cloud becomes very large, the water in it become large and heavy. Raindrops start to fall through the cloud when the rising air can no longer hold them up. Meanwhile, cool dry air starts to enter the cloud. Because cool air is heavier than warm air, it starts to descend in the cloud (known as a downdraft). The downdraft pulls the heavy water downward, making rain.
This cloud has become a cumulonimbus cloud because it has an updraft, a downdraft, and rain. Lightning and thunder start to occur, as well as heavy rain. The cumulonimbus is now a thunderstorm cell.
|
|
Dissipating Stage
After about 30 minutes, the thunderstorm begins to dissipate. This occurs when the downdrafts in the cloud begins to dominate over the updraft. Since warm moist air can no longer rise, cloud droplets can no longer form. The storm dies out with light rain as the cloud disappears from bottom to top.
The whole process takes about one hour for an ordinary thunderstorm.
|
|
|