Anvil - The flat, spreading top of a Cb
(cumulonimbus), often shaped like an anvil. Thunderstorm anvils may
spread hundreds of miles downwind from the thunderstorm itself, and
sometimes may spread upwind
Anvil
Crawler - [Slang], a lightning discharge occurring
within the anvil
of a thunderstorm, characterized by one or more channels that appear to
crawl along the underside of the anvil. They typically appear during
the weakening or dissipating stage of the parent thunderstorm, or
during an active MCS.
Backing Winds
- Winds which shift in a counterclockwise direction with time at a
given location (e.g. from southerly to southeasterly), or change
direction in a counterclockwise sense with height (e.g. westerly at the
surface but becoming more southerly aloft). The opposite of veering
winds. In storm spotting, a backing wind usually refers to the turning
of a
south or southwest surface wind with time to a more east or
southeasterly direction. Backing of the surface wind can increase the
potential for tornado development by increasing the directional shear
at low levels.
Back-sheared Anvil - A thunderstorm
anvil which spreads upwind, against the flow aloft. A back-sheared
anvil often implies a very strong updraft and a high severe weather
potential.<>
Bear's Cage - A region of storm-scale rotation, in a
thunderstorm, which is wrapped in heavy precipitation. This area often
coincides with a radar hook echo and/or mesocyclone, especially one
associated with an HP storm. The term reflects the danger involved in
observing such an area visually, which must be done at close range in
low visibility.<>
Beaver Tail - A particular type of inflow band with a
relatively broad, flat appearance suggestive of a beaver's tail. It is
attached to a supercell's general updraft and is oriented roughly
parallel to the pseudo-warm front,
i.e., usually east to west or southeast to northwest. As with any
inflow band, cloud elements move toward the updraft, i.e., toward the
west or northwest. Its size and shape change as the strength of the
inflow changes. See also inflow stinger. Spotters should note the
distinction between a beaver tail and a tail cloud. A "true" tail cloud
typically is attached to the wall cloud
and has a cloud base at about the same level as the wall cloud itself.
A beaver tail, on the other hand, is not attached to the wall cloud and
has a cloud base at about the same height as the updraft base
(which by definition is higher than the wall cloud). Unlike the beaver
tail, the tail cloud forms from air that is flowing from the storm's
main precipitation cascade region (or outflow region). Thus, it can be
oriented at a large angle to the pseudo-warm front.
Boundary Layer - In general, a layer of
air adjacent to a bounding surface. Specifically, the term most often
refers to the
planetary boundary layer,
which is the layer within which the effects of friction are
significant. For the earth, this layer is considered to be roughly the
lowest one or two kilometers of the atmosphere. It is within this layer
that temperatures are most strongly affected by daytime insolation
and nighttime radiational cooling, and winds are affected by friction
with the earth's surface. The effects of friction die out gradually
with height, so the "top" of this layer cannot be defined exactly.
There is a thin layer immediately above the earth's surface known as
the
surface boundary layer
(or simply the surface layer). This layer is only a part of the
planetary boundary layer, and represents the layer within which
friction effects are more or less constant throughout (as opposed to
decreasing with height, as they do above it). The surface boundary
layer is roughly 10 meters thick, but again the exact depth is
indeterminate. Like friction, the effects of insolation and radiational
cooling are strongest within this layer.
Bow Echo - A radar echo which is linear
but bent outward in a bow shape (Fig. 1). Damaging straight-line winds
often occur near the "crest" or center of a bow echo. Areas of
circulation also can develop at either end of a bow echo, which
sometimes can lead to tornado formation - especially in the left
(usually northern) end, where the circulation exhibits cyclonic
rotation.
Bust - An
inaccurate forecast or an unsuccessful storm chase; usually a situation
in which thunderstorms or severe weather are expected, but do not occur.
Cap
(or Capping
Inversion) - A layer of relatively warm air aloft (usually
several
thousand feet above the ground) which suppresses or delays the
development of thunderstorms. Air parcels rising into this layer become
cooler than the surrounding air, which inhibits their ability to rise
further. As such, the cap often prevents or delays thunderstorm
development even in the presence of extreme instability. However if the
cap is removed or weakened, then explosive thunderstorm development can
occur. The cap is an important ingredient in most severe thunderstorm
episodes, as it serves to separate warm, moist air below and cooler,
drier air above. With the cap in place, air below it can continue to
warm and/or moisten, thus increasing the amount of potential
instability. Or, air above it can cool, which also increases potential
instability. But without a cap, either process (warming/moistening at
low levels or cooling aloft) results in a faster release of available
instability - often before instability levels become large enough to
support severe weather development.
CAPE - Convective Available Potential Energy. A measure of the amount of
energy available for convection. CAPE is directly related to the
maximum potential vertical speed within an updraft;
thus, higher values indicate greater potential for severe weather.
Observed values in thunderstorm environments often may exceed 1,000
joules per kilogram (j/kg), and in extreme cases may exceed 5,000 j/kg.
However, as with other indices or indicators, there are no threshold
values above which severe weather becomes imminent. CAPE is represented
on a sounding
by the area enclosed between the environmental temperature profile and
the path of a rising air parcel, over the layer within which the latter
is warmer than the former. (This area often is called positive area.)
Clear Slot
- A local region of clearing skies or reduced cloud cover, indicating
an intrusion of drier air; often seen as a bright area with higher
cloud bases on the west or southwest side of a wall cloud. A clear slot
is believed to be a visual indication of a rear flank downdraft..
Cloud Tags - Ragged, detached cloud
fragments.
<>
Cold-air Funnel - A funnel cloud or
(rarely) a small, relatively weak tornado
that can develop from a small shower or thunderstorm when the air aloft
is unusually cold (hence the name). They are much less violent than
other types of tornadoes.
Convection
- Generally, transport of heat and moisture by the movement of a fluid.
In meteorology, the term is used specifically to describe vertical
transport of heat and moisture, especially by updrafts and downdrafts
in an unstable atmosphere. The terms "convection" and "thunderstorms"
often are used interchangeably, although thunderstorms are only one
form of convection. Cbs, towering cumulus clouds, and ACCAS
clouds all are visible forms of convection. However, convection is not
always made visible by clouds. Convection which occurs without cloud
formation is called dry convection, while the visible convection
processes referred to above are forms of moist convection.
<>
Convergence - A contraction of a vector field; the opposite
of divergence.
Convergence in a horizontal wind field indicates that more air is
entering a given area than is leaving at that level. To compensate for
the resulting "excess," vertical motion may result: upward forcing if
convergence is at low levels, or downward forcing (subsidence)
if convergence is at high levels. Upward forcing from low-level
convergence increases the potential for thunderstorm development (when
other factors, such as instability, are favorable).
<><>
Core Punch - A penetration by a vehicle into the heavy
precipitation core of a thunderstorm.
Derecho - (Pronounced deh-REY-cho), a widespread and usually
fast-moving windstorm associated with convection. Derechos include any
family of downburst clusters produced by an extratropical MCS, and can
produce damaging straight-line winds over areas hundreds of miles long
and more than 100 miles across.
Dew Point
(or Dew-point Temperature) - A measure of atmospheric moisture. It is
the temperature to which air must be cooled in order to reach
saturation (assuming air pressure and moisture content are constant).
Directional Shear - The component of
wind shear
which is due to a change in wind direction with height, e.g.,
southeasterly winds at the surface and southwesterly winds aloft. A
veering wind with height in the lower part of the atmosphere is a type
of directional shear often considered important for tornado development.
Divergence - The expansion or spreading
out of a vector field; usually said of horizontal winds. It is the
opposite of convergence.
Divergence at upper levels of the atmosphere enhances upward motion,
and hence the potential for thunderstorm development (if other factors
also are favorable).
Dry Line -
A boundary separating moist and dry air masses, and an important factor
in severe weather frequency in the Great Plains. It typically lies
north-south across the central and southern high Plains states during
the spring and early summer, where it separates moist air from the Gulf
of Mexico (to the east) and dry desert air from the southwestern states
(to the west). The dry line typically advances eastward during the
afternoon and retreats westward at night. However, a strong storm
system can sweep the dry line eastward into the Mississippi Valley, or
even further east, regardless of the time of day. A typical dry line
passage results in a sharp drop in humidity
(hence the name), clearing skies, and a wind shift from south or
southeasterly to west or southwesterly. (Blowing dust and rising
temperatures also may follow, especially if the dry line passes during
the daytime).
These changes occur in reverse order when the dry line retreats
westward. Severe and sometimes tornadic thunderstorms often develop
along a dry line or in the moist air just to the east of it, especially
when it begins moving eastward.
Flanking Line - A line of cumulus or
towering cumulus clouds connected to and extending outward from the
most active part of a supercell,
normally on the southwest side. The line normally has a stair-step
appearance, with the tallest clouds closest to the main storm, and
generally coincides with the pseudo-cold front.
Forward Flank Downdraft -
The main region of downdraft in the forward, or leading, part of a
supercell, where most of the heavy precipitation is. Compare with rear
flank downdraft.
Front - A
boundary or transition zone between two air masses of different
density, and thus (usually) of different temperature. A moving front is
named according to the advancing air mass, e.g., cold front if colder
air is advancing.
Funnel Cloud - A condensation funnel
extending from the base of a towering cumulus or Cb, associated with a
rotating column of air that is
not in contact with the ground
(and hence different from a tornado). A condensation funnel is a
tornado,
not a funnel cloud, if either a) it is in contact with
the ground or b) a debris cloud or dust whirl is visible beneath it.
Gust Front - The leading edge of gusty
surface winds from thunderstorm downdrafts; sometimes associated with a
shelf cloud or roll cloud.
Gustnado - Gust front tornado. A
small tornado, usually weak and short-lived, that occurs along the gust
front of a thunderstorm. Often it is visible only as a debris cloud or
dust whirl near the ground. Gustnadoes are not associated with
storm-scale rotation (i.e. mesocyclones); they are more likely to be
associated visually with a shelf cloud than with a wall cloud.
Hook (or Hook Echo) - A radar
reflectivity
pattern characterized by a hook-shaped extension of a thunderstorm
echo, usually in the right-rear part of the storm (relative to its
direction of motion). A hook often is associated with a mesocyclone,
and indicates favorable conditions for tornado development.
HP Storm
or HP Supercell - High-Precipitation storm (or
High-Precipitation supercell). A supercell thunderstorm in which heavy
precipitation (often including hail) falls on the trailing side of the
mesocyclone. Precipitation often totally envelops the region of
rotation, making visual identification of any embedded tornadoes
difficult and very dangerous. Unlike most classic supercells, the
region of rotation in many HP storms develops in the front-flank region
of the storm (i.e., usually in the eastern portion). HP storms often
produce extreme and prolonged downburst events, serious flash flooding,
and very large damaging hail events.
Inflow Bands (or Feeder Bands)
- Bands of low clouds, arranged parallel to the low-level winds and
moving into or toward a thunderstorm. They may indicate the strength of
the inflow of moist air into the storm, and, hence, its potential
severity. Spotters should be especially wary of inflow bands that are
curved in a manner suggesting cyclonic rotation; this pattern may
indicate the presence of a mesocyclone.
Insolation - Incoming solar radiation.
Solar heating; sunshine.
Instability
- The tendency for air parcels to accelerate when they are
displaced
from their original position; especially, the tendency to accelerate
upward after being lifted. Instability is a prerequisite for severe
weather - the greater the instability, the greater the potential for
severe thunderstorms.
Inversion
- Generally, a departure from the usual increase or decrease in an
atmospheric property with altitude. Specifically it almost always
refers to a temperature inversion, i.e., an increase in temperature
with height, or to the layer within which such an increase occurs. An
inversion is present in the lower part of a cap.
Jet Stream
- Relatively strong winds concentrated in a narrow stream in the
atmosphere, normally referring to horizontal, high-altitude winds. The
position and orientation of jet streams vary from day to day. General
weather patterns (hot/cold, wet/dry) are related closely to the
position, strength and orientation of the jet stream (or jet streams).
A jet stream at low levels is known as a low-level jet.
Landspout - A tornado that does not
arise from organized storm-scale rotation and therefore is not
associated with a wall cloud (visually) or a mesocyclone (on radar).
Landspouts typically are observed beneath Cbs or towering cumulus
clouds (often as no more than a dust whirl), and essentially are the
land-based equivalents of waterspouts.
Left Mover - A thunderstorm which moves
to the left relative to the steering winds, and to other nearby
thunderstorms; often the northern part of a splitting storm.
Lifted Index (or LI) - A common measure
of atmospheric instability.
Its value is obtained by computing the temperature that air near the
ground would have if it were lifted to some higher level (around 18,000
feet, usually) and comparing that temperature to the actual temperature
at that level. Negative values indicate instability - the more
negative, the more unstable the air is, and the stronger the updrafts
are likely to be with any developing thunderstorms. However there are
no "magic numbers" or threshold LI values below which severe weather
becomes imminent.
Low-level Jet
(abbrev. LLJ) - A region of relatively strong winds in the lower
part
of the atmosphere. Specifically, it often refers to a southerly wind
maximum in the boundary layer, common over the Plains states at night
during the warm season (spring and summer).
LP Storm
(or LP Supercell) - Low-Precipitation storm (or Low-Precipitation
supercell). A supercell
thunderstorm characterized by a relative lack of visible precipitation.
Visually similar to a classic supercell, except without the heavy
precipitation core. LP storms often exhibit a striking visual
appearance; the main tower often is bell-shaped, with a corkscrew
appearance suggesting rotation. They are capable of producing tornadoes
and very large hail. Radar identification often is difficult relative
to other types of supercells, so visual reports are very important. LP
storms almost always occur on or near the dry line, and thus are
sometimes referred to as dry line storms.
Mammatus Clouds - Rounded, smooth,
sack-like protrusions hanging from the underside of a cloud (usually a
thunderstorm anvil). Mammatus clouds often accompany severe
thunderstorms, but do not produce severe weather; they may accompany
non-severe storms as well.
MCS -
Mesoscale
Convective
System.
A complex of thunderstorms which becomes organized on a scale larger
than the individual thunderstorms, and normally persists for several
hours or more. MCSs may be round or linear in shape, and include
systems such as tropical cyclones, squall lines, and MCCs
(among others). MCS often is used to describe a cluster of
thunderstorms that does not satisfy the size, shape, or duration
criteria of an MCC.
Mesocyclone - A storm-scale region of
rotation, typically around 2-6 miles in diameter and often found in the
right rear flank of a supercell (or often on the eastern, or front,
flank of an HP storm). The circulation of a mesocyclone covers an area
much larger than the tornado that may develop within it.
Microburst - A small, concentrated
downburst
affecting an area less than 4 kilometers (about 2.5 miles) across. Most
microbursts are rather short-lived (5 minutes or so), but on rare
occasions they have been known to last up to 6 times that long.
Negative-tilt Trough - An upper level
system
which is tilted to the west with increasing latitude (i.e., with an
axis from southeast to northwest). A negative-tilt trough often is a
sign of a developing or intensifying system.
Nowcast - A short-term weather
forecast, generally out to six hours or less.
Orphan Anvil - An anvil from a
dissipated thunderstorm, below which no other clouds remain.
Outflow Boundary - A storm-scale or
mesoscale
boundary separating thunderstorm-cooled air (outflow) from the
surrounding air; similar in effect to a cold front, with passage marked
by a wind shift and usually a drop in temperature. Outflow boundaries
may persist for 24 hours or more after the thunderstorms that generated
them dissipate, and may travel hundreds of miles from their area of
origin. New thunderstorms often develop along outflow boundaries,
especially near the point of intersection with another boundary (cold
front, dry line, another outflow boundary, etc)
Overshooting Top - A dome-like
protrusion above a thunderstorm anvil, representing a very strong
updraft and hence a higher potential for severe weather with that
storm. A persistent and/or large overshooting top (anvil dome) often is
present on a supercell. A short-lived overshooting top, or one that
forms and dissipates in cycles, may indicate the presence of a pulse
storm or a cyclic storm.
Rain Foot
- A horizontal bulging near the surface in a precipitation
shaft, forming a foot-shaped prominence. It is a visual indication of a
wet microburst.
Rain-free
Base - A dark, horizontal cloud base with no visible
precipitation beneath it. It typically marks the location of the
thunderstorm updraft. Tornadoes may develop from wall clouds
attached to the rain-free base, or from the rain-free base itself -
especially when the rain-free base is on the south or southwest side of
the main precipitation area.
Note that the rain-free base may not actually be rain free; hail or
large rain drops may be falling. For this reason, updraft base is more
accurate.
Rear Flank Downdraft
(or RFD) - A region of dry air subsiding on the back side of,
and wrapping around, a mesocyclone. It often is visible as a clear slot
wrapping around the wall cloud. Scattered large precipitation particles
(rain and hail) at the interface between the clear slot and wall cloud
may show up on radar as a hook or pendant; thus the presence of a hook
or pendant may indicate the presence of an RFD.
Right Mover
- A thunderstorm that moves appreciably to the right relative to the
main steering winds and to other nearby thunderstorms. Right movers
typically are associated with a high potential for severe weather.
(Supercells
often are right movers.)
Scud - Small, ragged, low cloud
fragments that are unattached to a larger cloud base and often seen
with and behind cold fronts and thunderstorm gust fronts. Such clouds
generally are associated with cool moist air, such as thunderstorm
outflow.
Shear - Variation in wind speed (speed
shear) and/or direction (directional shear)
over a short distance. Shear usually refers to vertical wind shear,
i.e., the change in wind with height, but the term also is used in
Doppler radar to describe changes in radial velocity over short
horizontal distances.
Shelf Cloud - A low, horizontal
wedge-shaped arcus cloud, associated with a thunderstorm gust front (or
occasionally with a cold front, even in the absence of thunderstorms).
Unlike the roll cloud,
the shelf cloud is attached to the base of the parent cloud above it
(usually a thunderstorm). Rising cloud motion often can be seen in the
leading (outer) part of the shelf cloud, while the underside often
appears turbulent, boiling, and wind-torn.
Speed Shear - The component of wind
shear
which is due to a change in wind speed with height, e.g., southwesterly
winds of 20 mph at 10,000 feet increasing to 50 mph at 20,000 feet.
Speed shear is an important factor in severe weather development,
especially in the middle and upper levels of the atmosphere.
Squall Line - A solid or nearly solid
line or band of active thunderstorms.
Straight-line Winds - Generally, any
wind that is not associated with rotation, used mainly to differentiate
them from tornadic winds.
Supercell - A thunderstorm with a
persistent rotating updraft. Supercells are rare, but are responsible
for a remarkably high percentage of severe weather events - especially
tornadoes, extremely large hail and damaging straight-line winds. They
frequently travel to the right of the main environmental winds (i.e.,
they are right movers). Radar characteristics often (but not always)
include a hook or pendant, bounded weak echo region (BWER), V-notch,
mesocyclone, and sometimes a TVS. Visual characteristics often include
a rain-free base (with or without a wall
cloud), tail cloud, flanking line, overshooting top, and back-sheared
anvil, all of which normally are observed in or near the right rear or
southwest part of the storm. Storms exhibiting these characteristics
often are called classic supercells; however HP storms and LP
storms also are supercell varieties.
Tail-end Charlie - The thunderstorm at
the southernmost end of a squall line
or other line or band of thunderstorms. Since low-level southerly
inflow of warm, moist air into this storm is relatively unimpeded, such
a storm often has a higher probability of strengthening to severe
levels than the other storms in the line.
Towering Cumulus - A large cumulus
cloud with great vertical development, usually with a cauliflower-like
appearance, but lacking the characteristic anvil of a Cb. (Often
shortened to "towering cu," and abbreviated TCU.).
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Triple Point - The intersection point between two boundaries
(dry line, outflow boundary, cold front, etc.), often a focus for
thunderstorm development.Triple point also may refer to a point on the
supercell, where the warm moist inflow, the rain-cooled outflow from
the forward flank downdraft, and the rear flank downdraft all
intersect; this point is a favored location for tornado development (or
redevelopment).
Updraft - A small-scale current of
rising air. If the air is sufficiently moist, then the moisture
condenses to become a cumulus cloud or an individual tower of a
towering cumulus or Cb.
Veering Winds - Winds which shift in a
clockwise
direction with time at a given location (e.g., from southerly to
westerly), or which change direction in a clockwise sense with height
(e.g., southeasterly at the surface turning to southwesterly aloft).
The latter example is a form of directional shear which is important
for tornado formation. Compare with backing winds.
Virga - Streaks
or wisps of precipitation falling from a cloud but evaporating before
reaching the ground. In certain cases, shafts of virga may precede a
microburst; see dry microburst.
Wall Cloud - A localized, persistent,
often abrupt lowering from a rain-free base.
Wall clouds can range from a fraction of a mile up to nearly five miles
in diameter, and normally are found on the south or southwest (inflow)
side of the thunderstorm. When seen from within several miles, many
wall clouds exhibit rapid upward motion and cyclonic rotation. However,
not all wall clouds rotate. Rotating wall clouds usually develop before
strong or violent tornadoes, by anywhere from a few minutes up to
nearly an hour. Wall clouds should be monitored visually for signs of
persistent,
sustained rotation and/or rapid vertical motion.