
-
Accessory Clouds
- Clouds that are dependent
on a larger cloud system for development and continuance. Accessory clouds
associated with the thunderstorm include roll, shelf, mammatus, and wall clouds.
- Anvil
- The spreading of the upper
portion of a cumulonimbus cloud into an anvil-shaped
plume usually of fibrous or smooth appearance. Strong or severe thunderstorms
often have thicker anvils with the side and bottom having a cumuliform or slowly
boiling appearance in the immediate vicinity of the parent cumulonimbus.
- Collar Cloud
- Frequently used as a
synonym for wall cloud, although it actually is a generally
circular ring of cloud surrounding the upper portion of a wall
cloud.
- Cumulonimbus Cloud
- The parent
cloud of a thunderstorm. The cumulonimbus cloud towers above the ordinary cumulus clouds, with stronger or severe storms often having a
more sharply outlined "hard" appearance with relatively rapid rising motions
visible. The cloud's upper portion includes the anvil.
Accompanying precipitation is often heavy and the usual occurrence of lightning
and thunder with these clouds leads to the popular names of thunderhead or
thundercloud.
- Cumulus Cloud
- A column of rising
air that has condensed into a dense, nonfibrous cloud with distinct outlines,
appearing much like a rising mound or dome. The base of the cloud is relatively
flat and dark, while the tower is usually white and sunlit. The cumulus cloud is
the first stage of a developing thunderstorm.
- Downdraft
- A column of generally
cool air that rapidly sinks to the ground, most often accompanied by
precipitation in a shower or thunderstorm. Areas of
downdraft usually contain little cloud, and what clouds that may be present are
typically dissipating.
- Flanking Line
- A line of cumulus connected to and extending outward from the most
active portion of a parent cumulonimbus, usually
found on the southwest side of the storm. The cloud line has roughly a stair step
appearance with the taller clouds adjacent to the parent cumulonimbus. It is most frequently associated with
strong or severe thunderstorms.
- Flash Flooding
- Rapidly-developing
flooding of tributaries, usually as a result of thunderstorms.
- Front
- A transition zone between two
differing air masses. Basic types are cold front, warm
front, and stationary front. Thunderstorms can form in association with any of these
fronts, although fronts are not necessary for thunderstorm development.
- Funnel Cloud
- A funnel-shaped cloud
extending from a towering cumulus or cumulonimbus base. It is associated with a towering air
column that is not in contact with the ground. If a ground-based debris or dust
whirl is visible below the funnel aloft, the cloud is a tornado.
- GOES-8
- One of the Geostationary Operational Environmental Satellites. They are owned and run by the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), while NASA designs and launches them.
- Gust Front
- The leading edge of the thunderstorm downdraft air.
Most prominent beneath the rain-free base and on the
leading edge of an approaching thunderstorm. Usually
marked by gusty, cool winds. The shelf or roll cloud sometimes accompanies the gust front, especially when
the gust front precedes a line of thunderstorms.
- Hail
- Precipitation in the form of
balls or clumps of ice produced by thunderstorms.
Severe storms with intense updrafts are most likely to
produce large hail.
- Hook Echo
- A radar pattern sometimes
observed in the southwest quadrant of a tornadic thunderstorm. Appearing like a fishhook turned in toward
the east, the hook echo is precipitation aloft around the periphery of a
rotating column of air 2-10 miles in diameter.
- Lightning
- Any and all of the
various forms of visible electrical discharge caused by thunderstorms. Severe thunderstorms usually have frequent --
sometimes continuous -- lightning. However, some non-severe thunderstorms also
contain frequent and vivid electrical displays, while some severe storms are
accompanied by little lightning.
- Mamma Clouds
- Also called
mammatus, these clouds appear as hanging, rounded protuberances
or pouches on the under-surface of a cloud. With thunderstorms, mammatus are seen on the underside of
the anvil. These clouds do not produce tornadoes, funnels, hail, or any other type of severe weather, although they often
accompany severe thunderstorms.
- NSSL
- The National Severe Storms Laboratory.
- Precipitation Shaft
- A visible
column of rain and/or hail falling from a cloud base. When
viewed against a light background, heavy precipitation appears very dark gray,
sometimes with a turquoise tinge. This turquoise tinge has been commonly
attributed to hail, but its actual cause is unknown.
- Rain-Free Base
- A horizontal, dark
cumulonimbus base that has no visible
precipitation beneath it. This structure usually marks the location of the thunderstorm updraft. Tornadoes most commonly develop (1) from wall
clouds that are attached to the rain-free base, or (2) from the rain-free
base itself. This is particularly true when the rain-free base is observed to the
south or southwest of the precipitation shaft.
- River Flood
- Usually occurs on rivers,
after flash flooding has occurred on streams and
tributaries. River floods develop and reach their peak more slowly than flash floods. In many cases, the river flood peak occurs
after the rain has ended.
- Roll Cloud
- A relatively rare,
low-level horizontal, tube-shaped accessory cloud completely detached from the cumulonimbus base. When present, it is located along the
gust front and most frequently observed on the leading edge
of a line of thunderstorms. The roll cloud will
appear to be slowly "rolling" about its horizontal axis. Roll clouds are
not and do not produce tornadoes
- Scud Clouds
- Low cloud fragments often
seen in association with and behind thunderstorm gust fronts. these clouds are ragged and wind-torn and are not
usually attached to the thunderstorm base. Scud clouds do not produce severe
weather. In some cases, when clouds are attached to the thunderstorm base, they
can be mistaken for wall clouds or tornadoes.
- Severe Thunderstorm
- A
thunderstorm that goes from the mature stage to the severe stage before
dissipating. Severe thunderstorms are most efficient "machines" because the updraft remains strong for a long time. They also
occasionally contain rotation on a broad scale. Because of its structure, the
severe storm may last for hours beyond the lifetime of a normal thunderstorm while producing large hail, high winds, torrential rain, and possible tornadoes. Officially, a thunderstorm is classified as severe if 50-knot (58 mph)
winds are measured, 3/4-inch or larger hail occurs, or funnel clouds or tornadoes develop.
- Shelf Cloud
- A low-level horizontal accessory cloud that appears to be wedge-shaped as it
approaches. It is usually attached to the thunderstorm base and forms along the gust front. The leading edge of the shelf is often smooth and at
times layered or terraced. It is most often seen along the leading edge of an
approaching line of thunderstorms, accompanied by
gusty straight winds as it passes overhead and followed by
precipitation. The underside is concave upward, turbulent, boiling, or wind-torn.
Tornadoes rarely occur with the shelf cloud.
- Squall Line
- Any line or narrow band
of active thunderstorms. The term is usually used to
describe solid or broken lines of strong or severe
thunderstorms.
- Straight Winds
- Winds associated
with a thunderstorm, most frequently found with the
gust front. These winds originate as downdraft air reaches the ground and rapidly spreads out,
becoming a strong and horizontal flow. Damaging straight winds, although
relatively rare themselves, are much more common than are tornadoes.
- Tail Cloud
- A low tail-shaped cloud
extending outward from the northern quadrant of a wall cloud.
Motions in the tail cloud are toward the wall cloud with rapid
updraft at the junction of tail and wall
cloud. This horizontal cloud is not a funnel or tornado.
- Thunderstorm
- A local storm
(accompanied by lightning and thunder) produced by a cumulonimbus cloud, usually with gusty winds, heavy
rain, and sometimes hail. Non-severe thunderstorms rarely
have lifetimes over two hours. A typical non-severe thunderstorm life cycle
consists of three stages: cumulus stage, mature
stage, and dissipation stage.
- Tornado
- A violently rotating narrow
column of air in contact with the ground and extending from a thunderstorm base.
The tornado is most often found in the southwest quadrant of the storm, near the
trailing edge of the cumulonimus cloud. Tornadoes and
funnel clouds are usually pendant from wall
clouds or directly from the thunderstorm base,
within a few miles to the southwest of the precipitation
shaft. The spinning motion of a tornado is most often left to right on the
backside (counterclockwise). Tornadoes have been called twisters
and cyclones, but these words are all synonyms for the most violent storm on
earth, with estimated wind speeds up to 300 mph.
- Updraft
- Warm moist air which rises
and condenses into a visible cumulus or cumulonimbus cloud. Once the cloud forms, it depends on
the updraft for continuance and further development.
- Virga
- Wisps or streaks of rain
falling out of a cloud but not reaching the earth's surface. When seen from a
distance, these streaks can be mistaken for funnels or tornadoes.
- Wall Clouds
- A local and often abrupt
lowering of a rain-free cumulonimbus base into a low-hanging accessory cloud, from 1 to 4 miles in diameter. The wall
cloud is usually situated in the southwest portion of the storm below an intense
updraft marked by the main cumulonimbus cloud and associated with a very strong or
severe thunderstorm. When seen from several miles away,
many wall clouds exhibit rapid upward motion and rotation in the same sense as a
tornado, except with considerably lower speed. A
rotating wall cloud usually develops before tornadoes or
funnel clouds by a time which can range from a few minutes
up to possibly an hour. Sometimes other long-hanging accessory clouds are mistakenly identified as wall clouds.
Introductory Information | Safety Information | General Glossary | Tornado Intensity Scale
Warning Definitions | Severe Event Location Codes | Tornado Statistics Listed by State (1950-1994)
1995 Killer Tornadoes | Storm Chaser's Guide
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